׉?ׁB!בCט 
 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://NGPjpxosMiHr-5wGrWoICTeBubBs3cnvEoTS17Lx8Vc `׉	 7cassandra://BYWjFwuqUNUHh3V2EngqEjGDfGx00_LfqcoqA3jlpZI\D`q׉	 7cassandra://LYZv5kIrh7s5mt-FvLScJzEZ88B9SV4wVggiI-bWSdw!` iXqn4n,G׈EiXqn4n,G׉E JANUARY 2026 | Vol.31 Issue 1
HOLLY
NORRIS
DIDN'T
CHOOSE
TO BE
HOMELESS
P.8
MATTER
TAKES UP
SPACE,
AND GIVES
IT TOO P.4
$2
SUGGESTED
FROM YOUR VENDOR:
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Help us help your neighbors.
We're
Right
Here.
Learn more about our work and the people we serve: DENVERVOICE.ORG
׉	 7cassandra://xG3AT8nxMRDCw0XWPvyXgQM5H7SwR-u05i0vz23skeY-a` iXqn4n,G׉EFrom the
Editor
R
Elisabeth Monaghan
was born and raised in
Denver, joining the VOICE
as managing editor in
2019. She is passionate
about social justice, and
believes that writing and
creative expression are
some of our most powerful
tools in combating
homelessness and poverty.
DENVERVOICE.
CE.
MANAGING EDITOR
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
ART DIRECTOR
ECENTLY, as I was mapping out the January issue, I asked Denver VOICE
vendor Steve Anson what he thought our Ask a Vendor question
should be for the month. While discussing the subject of New Year’s
resolutions, we talked about approaching it differently and ultimately landed
on the question, “Why Do Some of Us Struggle with New Year’s Resolutions?”
As you will see in the vendor answers to this month’s question, Steve shared his
thoughts on that topic.
In the meantime, as I spoke with the other vendors who answered the Ask
a Vendor question for this issue, I revised the question so that vendors could
discuss why/if it was a challenge, as they shift from 2025 to the New Year. Their
answers focus less on challenges and more on the opportunity for starting fresh
in the New Year.
For folks paying attention to the news, or who are affected by the reduction or
complete cancellation of government programs that benefit seniors, children,
or any individuals experiencing homelessness or financial instability, the idea
of launching into 2026 may not offer the same optimism that often comes when
the clock changes and the New Year begins.
Regardless of how kind or good a person is, none of us has the power to
singlehandedly change the minds of government officials who are hellbent on
giving tax breaks to billionaires while insisting that minimum-wage workers
try harder, pull themselves up by their bootstraps, and stop relying on the
government for healthcare, education, or the ability to meet basic needs.
And yet, what these vendor responses remind us is that even when the
systems around us feel immovable, people are not. A new year does not
magically erase hardship, but it can offer moments of reflection, connection,
and resolve — small shifts that matter because they belong to us. Optimism,
in this sense, is not denial; it is the choice to keep showing up, to keep telling
our stories, and to keep imagining something better, even when the odds feel
stacked against us.
- Elisabeth Monaghan
Managing Editor
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
VOLUNTEER COPY EDITORS
ARTISTS/PHOTOGRAPHERS
CONTRIBUTORS
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Elisabeth Monaghan
Giles Clasen
Andrew Fraieli
Maddie Egerton
Jennifer Forker
Aaron Sullivan
Robert Davis
Giles Clasen
Grace Wilson
Lando Allen
Steve Anson
Belinda Bowie
Giles Clasen
Jerry Rosen
Tyronzer Sanders
Grace Wilson
Isabella Colletti, Secretary
Michael Burkley
Eduardo Platon
Edwin Rapp
Donald Burnes
Jennifer Forker
Ande Sailer
Linda Shapley
Steve Baker
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
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Wednesdays, 10am-1pm
Since 1996, the Denver VOICE has served individuals
experiencing housing or financial instability by providing lowbarrier
income opportunities. In the time since our inception,
we have put more than 4,600 vendors to work, selling the
paper throughout the Denver metro area.
By focusing on poverty, housing, social justice, local arts
and entertainment, and the human experience behind
the headlines, we tell the stories that Denver media often
overlooks. An award-winning publication, the Denver VOICE
is a member of the International Network of Street Papers and
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THE COVER: A report from Metro Denver Homeless Initiative
found that more than 94% of unhoused people in the
Denver metro area did not choose to be homeless. People
like Holly Norris make up that overwhelming majority.
PHOTO BY GILES CLASEN
DENVER VOICE
3
erVOICE
erVOICE
ABOUT US
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Takes Up Space,
Photos and Story by Grace Wilson
and Gives it Too.
4
JANUARY 2026
Rick Griffi th, co-owner of MATTER, shows prints from 'Print Truth to Power' to Cindy and Steve, letterpress enthusiasts from Detroit, Michigan.
׉	 7cassandra://NUak0E2jJX5MYx_qAoiBkqjB7KLmEZhQzPXRjEA1XDU+` iXqn4n,G׉E TICK GRIFFITH OPENS A DRAWER and gently
traces over hundreds of wooden and lead
slivers, each with a single raised letter. These
are movable type, the heart of the nearly
1,000-year-old craft of letterpress.
“You’ll notice,” he says in a warm,
measured voice to an enthusiast visiting from Detroit,
“I don’t have any font names on these drawers. In the
beginning, I didn’t have the money or access to buy whole
typefaces, so I created sets from remnants, because who
would want those, right?”
Covering the walls around the studio, Griffith’s radiant
typographic designs show what the cast-off letters in his
collection can become, given space.
Thick and thin letters of various sizes, printed in a
dazzling chorus of hues, state everything from “GOOD
DESIGN SHOULD HAVE NO VICTIMS” to “NOT YOUR
MAGICAL NEGRO.” One simply lists important letterpress
measurements.
Griffith himself is in a jumpsuit emblazoned with the
NASA logo, a Guyanase flag, and a letterpressed reminder
to VOTE TO PROTECT DEMOCRACY. A British-WestIndian
born in London who immigrated to Washington
D.C., Griffith found his way to design through the 1980s
Black punk scene. For the past 26 years, he’s been channeling
this energy through MATTER.
MATTER is a design consultancy founded with print
presses, a Black and woman-owned bookstore, a printshop,
and a space for “designers, revolutionaries and other
thinking persons,” as their website puts it.
Print Truth to Power
On Thursday nights,
from 5-8 p.m.,
it becomes
a
workshop to “print truth to power.” Anyone who wants to
learn a bit about letterpress and design as a tool for change
and a way to question culture can attend — they just have to
be ready to work collaboratively.
Letterpress is a craft with many parts and large machines,
but the basic concept is using raised surfaces that are covered
in ink and pressed to paper to make prints. This was, for
hundreds of years, the way almost everything was printed.
Participants don’t all arrive at the same time, but each is
welcomed, or welcomed back by Griffith. They weave their
way through a room filled with four printing presses and
lined in old wooden letterpress cabinets. Off to the side, a
massive high-powered laser adds a touch of the modern, but
most of this work is using old tech to say new things.
Despite his status as an internationally-renowned master
printer, Griffith models collaboration and enthusiasm for
the people who show up to print truth to power.
“Nobody is in charge all of the time,” Griffith reminds the
group as they choose a statement and spacing for the plate of
text they’re putting together, unique letter by letter.
This doesn’t mean, however, that he won’t poke at an idea
that seems half-thought-through.
“If it won’t work, I’ll let you know,” he promises with a
smile.
Making Space between the Lines
Making space, Griffith said, is at the heart of nurturing
community. Instead of gathering and setting the type
with passive onlookers, he encourages members to make
decisions.
“If you have enough tools, getting out of the way so other
people can use them, that’s what community is all about,” he
said. “In this place, I have a lot of material and tools, so I’m
ensuring other people have access to what I have. In other
places, I might be the person who gets access; it’s really a
fractal kind of idea.”
Aaron Middleton, a photographer and designer, wanders
in to say hello and help as the plate is taking shape. He’s been
coming to MATTER twice a week or more for the past seven
years.
Standing in the hallway between the front and back of the
studio, Middleton reflects on what Griffith has shown him.
David Grajeda Gonzalez, artist and MATTER employee, holds up a linocut he carved based on
the hand of professor Rafael Fajardo, who first introduced him to MATTER.
DENVER VOICE
5
“As a Black man, here’s another Black man doing a creative
thing and figuring it out in Denver, and through helping out
here, I’ve met so many other creative communities of people
of color from around the world,” he said.
Complementary Elements
As the night flows on, Debra Johnson, Griffith’s “partnerin-everything,”
stops by to see if Griffith has any S-hooks,
or “shooks” as they call them, for the bookshop next to
the studio. The duo is planning for the soft launch of their
newest project, a used bookstore.
Johnson is also a designer, and together, the pair makes
decisions about all elements of MATTER as a small business
as well as a design project.
Asked what MATTER means to her, Johnson said their
purpose, “is to help people realize their purpose and
power and participate in community so that they don’t feel
alone. There is a direct relationship between how people
communicate and making a difference.”
Johnson’s perspective mirrors that of Mary Katherine
Keller, a community member who stopped by to help the
used book store take shape. Keller said she could sum up
MATTER as a combination of warmth and electricity.
“MATTER is the best classroom you could ever imagine.
isolation and numbing
There’s such a drive
towards
ourselves, but at MATTER, you’re learning how to be in
community with people. I’ve never been in that space and
felt out of place,” Keller said.
Proof of Community
At the front of the studio, David Grajeda Gonzalez is
organizing the efforts to get all the books for the used
bookstore shelved.
Grajeda Gonzalez works for the MATTER bookstore and
is also an artist. One of his many mediums is carving images
into blocks of linoleum that are then used in the letterpress
machines, a technique called lino-cut.
Sometimes, he’ll make one for the workshop to use,
encouraging people to feel its carved surface and choose
their own colors to print with, becoming part of the creative
process.
“There’s so much respect for everyone here as a human,
and it really enforces my self-worth,” he said.
Grajeda Gonzalez came to MATTER through one of his
art professors at the University of Denver, Rafael Fajardo.
Fajardo is one of Griffith’s close friends and a frequent
facilitator of print truth to power.
“MATTER is proof that I can find community,” Grajeda
Gonzalez said, “and I’m playing an intentional role in
sustaining it, and that’s a skill everyone can have.”
A Broader Message
Griffith and Johnson continually invest time, space, and
shop inventory on the perspectives of people pushed to the
margins of society by caste, gender, economics, and race.
One week, the shop might host an author talk on
“Desecrated Poppies,” a poetry collection written by Mx.
Yaffa — a disabled, autistic, trans queer Muslim, and
Indigenous Palestinian activist. Another week might bring
a seminar on the attention economy as part of a multi-year
series on philosophy and critical theory. MATTER’s events
are wide-ranging but tied together, in Griffith and Johnson’s
words, by love as an act of resistance.
This year AIGA, the professional association for design,
presented Griffith with the Medal of AIGA, the most
distinguished honor in the profession of communication
design, for his thirty-year legacy of using design as a tool to
shape and question culture.
Griffith said the medal was validating. While observing
truth to power’ participants using his lesson
the ‘print
on typographic math to size their letters, he muses on the
organization’s choice,
“AIGA is a national organization and most of my work
is on a small scale,” he said. “Rather than graphic design
always being about massive brands, they gave this medal
to someone working locally, communally. It validates that
design works at many scales.”
Letterpress has a long history. Movable type like that
in MATTER’s studio has been rearranged in printing
presses to write everything from runaway slave bulletins to
justifications of eugenics.
Griffith now tends to and preserves the letters that were
once kept from him. Some have been nicked and scratched,
and going forward, those marks will always be a part of the
way that they print, but the magic is in recombination.
The workshop tonight has finished their plate.
Ready and inked, it spells out, backwards and in bright
orange, YOUR RACIST STAPLER CAN’T PENETRATE
OUR DREAMS.
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ANDREA GIBSON
DOCUMENTARY
COME SEE ME
IN THE GOOD
LIGHT
Andrea Gibson in
the documentary
Come See me in
the Good Light
Story by By Ivana Brehas
AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARIAN RYAN WHITE still remembers
the words with which legendary poet Andrea Gibson
greeted him on their first meeting. “We showed up in the
driveway,” White recalls, “and Andrea came outside and
gave me a hug and said, ‘I guess you’re gonna be with me
when I die. Welcome to my home.” Thus began a creative
and personal journey between the two artists that resulted
in White’s new film, Come See Me in the Good Light, about
Gibson’s final year of life after a diagnosis of terminal cancer.
White is an experienced and accomplished filmmaker –
his past work includes Pamela, A Love Story (2023) and Ask
Dr Ruth (2019) – but he admits he was initially “a little afraid
of Andrea” and the daunting undertaking of documenting
someone who is dying. Yet Gibson, by instantly embracing
and welcoming White, quickly put him at ease. “The magic
of Andrea,” White reflects, “both as a person and as a poet, is
how disarming they are. They have an innate way of making
people feel at ease and comfortable, and they did that with
me very quickly.”
Come See Me in the Good Light began when White and
his producing partner Jess Hargrave asked comedian Tig
Notaro for an idea for a comedy film. “Honestly, we were
pretty appalled when she pitched a cancer poetry film,
which sounds like the opposite of funny on paper,” White
laughs. “But Tig said, ‘Hear me out, you’re gonna want to
hang up the phone, but this is one of the funniest people I’ve
ever known in my life.’”
Notaro sent through some clips of Gibson performing,
and White was floored. “I’m not a big spoken word poetry
person, so I had never even heard of Andrea,” he says. “But
two weeks later, we were on a plane to Colorado. That’s how
it all began.”
Indeed, it’s hard to imagine how a “cancer poetry film”
could be joyful. The film is deeply affecting, filled with
heartbreaking, emotionally swelling moments at which it’s
almost impossible not to cry. And yet, it’s also surprisingly
funny. “It’s an emotionally heavy film in every emotion,”
White agrees. “And that’s how Andrea lived their life.”
Look up Gibson’s work, and you’ll find a treasure trove of
poetry that is as incisive, witty, and emotionally vulnerable
as the poet themself. Good Light features footage of
Colorado’s Poet Laureate performing several of their works,
such as ‘Boomerang Valentine’, in which the lonely author
sardonically remarks: “My friend musters every bit of New
Age jargon she can fit onto her tongue and says, What if you
are the love of your life? I think, Oh my god, I hope that’s not
true, because I am absolutely not my type.”
The loves of Gibson’s life – from ex-girlfriends and friends
to their partner Megan Falley – are crucial presences in the
film. In an early scene, Gibson and Falley crack goofy, crude
jokes about trying to use sex to get the cancer out of Gibson’s
ovaries. “That scene was literally the first night of filming,”
6
White says. “That’s the day I met Andrea and Megan, and
that’s how comfortable they were with us being in the room,
from the very beginning.”
These moments of levity recur throughout the film,
demonstrating Gibson’s surprisingly life-affirming
attitude to their own looming death. It’s as if the certainty
of mortality invigorates Gibson into appreciating every
moment they have left. Gibson’s influence rubbed off on
White, who describes the experience of making Good Light
as deeply transformative.
“Before making this film, I was very uncomfortable with
the concept of mortality, and terrified of delving into it,” he
reflects. “Making this film, and meeting Andrea and Megan,
fundamentally changed a lot about me. It’s hard to talk about
without sounding cheesy, but there’s definitely a ‘before’
Ryan and an ‘after’ Ryan. All my loved ones around me say
that they saw me change in making the film.”
This impact is in no small part due to Gibson’s radical
openness as a documentary subject. “Andrea was very
different from most of my previous subjects,” White
recalls, “in that they really showed no concern about what
the finished film was going to be or how I was going to use
footage. That almost never happens. Everything we wanted
to film was always a ‘yes’ from Andrea… It was a really
beautiful cracked-openness that I had never seen from a
documentary subject before.”
The process of making a film about someone with a
terminal illness is inherently unpredictable. White and his
team had no way of knowing how much time they had left to
spend with Gibson, or how their film was going to end.
On the crew’s second visit, Gibson received a bad result
from their doctor. “The way that they internalised or
JANUARY 2026
digested that was like, they were gonna die very soon,”
White says. “It was like, ‘Are we even gonna be able to make
the movie about this, or is Andrea’s life gonna end at any
moment?’ But the only way I can describe it is, we didn’t care.
We were so addicted to getting to go there and be around
them that we were willing to put everything else aside– all
our films, our personal lives – and go there every few weeks.
We felt so alive when we were around them in that house in
Colorado. We just wanted to be around it and document it,
even if it became nothing.”
Thankfully, it didn’t become nothing. Come See Me in
the Good Light is an incredibly touching document of the
final months of a brilliant artist’s life, and one that White
hopes will leave audiences feeling just as transformed as
he was. “We got to receive this gift by being around Andrea
and Megan for their final year together, and my big hope is
that we managed to bottle up that gift and share it with the
audience. I think it can really shift people’s perception not
only of mortality, but of the act of living, and how much you
can fit into your time on this earth.”
Despite the specificity of its subject matter – a queer
spoken-word poet navigating ovarian cancer and making art
in Colorado – Good Light feels universally resonant. With
this film, White and Gibson remind us that grief and loss are
inevitable, but so are love, laughter, and the relentless beauty
of life.
In screenings that White has attended so far, the film’s
impact is already evident. “I’ve had people tell me after
screenings that they had to run outside and call their
partner, or child, or parent, and tell them they loved them.”
Courtesy of The Big Issue Australia / INSP.ngo
׉	 7cassandra://-IiuEaQSOWBfdRDseTHO0N03r5IaohOxJgkLp-LndaA%` iXqn4n,G׉EIVendor
Profile
BELINDA BOWIE
M
y name is Belinda Bowie, and I’ve
been a vendor for the VOICE off and on
since 2008. It’s been a true Godsend.
The VOICE is my go-to.
I started using crack when I was 16. It took
me away from my trauma and hid my pain, but
it became a trap. I’ve been fi ghting substances
ever since.
In 2023, my heart exploded. They had to
rebuild it like a jigsaw puzzle and told me I’m
not supposed to be alive.
Only when your chest is cracked open,
heart rebuilt, do you experience pain. And
to cope, the doctors prescribed serious pain
medications. Those pills, those opiates,
brought back a taste for drugs. I fought for
a year, but the temptation was ultimately
too much. I found strength living with my
daughters.
DENVER VOICE
I thought I was strong enough to live alone
again, but I turned back to drugs. And the
shame hit. There is no explaining how much
shame I feel when I use. I feel like I can’t go
back to the people who love me. I feel like I
let them down, and there is no way back. So
instead, I moved back to the streets. Recently,
I was sleeping on Colfax, with two pieces
of cardboard and a trash bag for a blanket.
Everything was a threat. That was rock bottom.
I took myself to detox. They saw I was trying.
They moved me to sober living and gave me
another chance. This is where my go-to, the
Denver VOICE, came through the strongest
I’ve ever felt. They helped me with gifts, home
visits, and kind, encouraging words.
Life has taken so much from me, but I refuse
to give up. I’m hopeful, sober, and ready. The
VOICE is the best part of my recovery plan.
7
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 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://0X1OtblEt73q0Q8QTk_9qZNC76RqYjzoYRp1uHGHtI0 fR`׉	 7cassandra://qx4uz_FVcPCYPjhkUwb4_0ds7zQO3pR1-VN7PNVLbVkm9`q׉	 7cassandra://_9bZscf8fnD-uZ6fdS4RmfdNPHV0sqkRk9AQpTYzHQY#|` iXrn4n,G׉EOLLY SUE NORRIS COUNTS BLANKETS
the way other people count hours of
sleep.
As winter settles in, staying alive
loitering.
According to Norris, city ordinances, like laws against
outside often comes down to layers
and luck.
“More blankets,” Norris said
when asked how she prepares for
cold nights.
Norris has lived unsheltered for more than a decade. Her
story cuts through one of the most common myths about
homelessness: that people living on the streets choose to be
there.
As cities debate enforcement, shelter capacity, and
public safety, Norris’ experience reflects what data shows:
homelessness is rarely a choice, and survival often comes at
the cost of stability, safety, and dignity.
Data from Metro Denver Homeless Initiative’s recent
“State of Homelessness” report also challenges common
misconceptions. More than 94% of people experiencing
homelessness in the Denver metro area reported they did
not choose to be homeless.
People like Norris make up that overwhelming majority.
Norris, who thinks she is 73 but acknowledged she could
be a little older or younger because time is hard to track when
living on a sidewalk, said her life outside has been shaped
less by personal choice than by a combination of family
breakdown, city ordinances, and constant displacement.
Holly Norris came to Denver by bus. She didn’t know
anyone in the Mile High City. She didn’t have any leads on
housing or resources.
Norris said she was sent to Denver by the Grand Junction
police, who offered her a ride to Denver or an arrest for
10
JANUARY 2026
“
THEY'RE
TREATED POORLY.
THEY'RE NOT
TREATED THE
SAME. THERE'S A
VERY DIFFERENT
STANDARD
OF CARE FOR
THE HOMELESS
POPULATION.”
trespassing, littering, and loitering, put every cop, security
officer, or other authority figure against people like her.
Police enforcement makes it nearly impossible to stay safe or
hold onto possessions.
When she arrived in Denver, Norris told herself she was
done moving. She decided she would set up camp and stay
put until someone offered her housing.
She stayed in the alley between Santa Fe Drive and
Kalamath Street near 10th Avenue for more than two weeks.
The Denver VOICE contacted the city’s Department of
Housing Stability, requesting a welfare check and potential
housing assistance. Outreach teams with the Colorado
Coalition for the Homeless were also contacted.
Neighbors called 911, and police checked on Norris; the
city’s Support Team Assisted Response also was dispatched
to check on her.
“To come to a site like this and have a woman who’s 73 and
not be able to get her into housing, it breaks my heart, and it
just shows that the system is so broken,” said Makenna Stark,
an outreach worker with STAR.
Stark has lived through homelessness herself. She said
the limitations of the broader system are evident in daily
outreach work. She sees a safety net that fails to meet the
needs of the unhoused community.
“I see it with police, I see it with EMS, how people get
taken to the hospital, and then they’re just shot back out,”
Stark said. “They’re treated poorly. They’re not treated
the same. There’s a very different standard of care for the
homeless population.”
The network of homeless service providers can be
difficult for individuals to access when they lack resources
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“It’s hard to navigate [the system] even when you’re at
This winter, as the weather grew colder, Moms for Social
your highest functioning self, so people who are struggling
on the streets don’t have a chance, especially when there’s so
few places for housing,” Stark said.
Even if someone can seek help, there aren’t enough shelter
beds or housing options to meet the need.
“We really value that opportunity to help people navigate
the system and get them where they need to go,” Stark said.
Shana Delwiche, who is a STAR clinician, said the
outreach teams try to help people access the resources
available in Denver, while acknowledging the system is
overwhelmed.
“We have an opportunity to connect with people who
are underserved and are being pressed by the system and
lack access to the resources,” Delwiche said. “We don’t have
enough resources for all of these people, and it’s really sad.”
The November night that Stark and Delwiche checked
on Norris was cold and snowy, so they offered to take her
to a warming center. Norris declined because she couldn’t
take her few possessions with her. She feared losing her bags
of clothing, soda, blankets, and ground mats, which would
leave her too vulnerable once she was back on the street.
“The [biggest] threat is losing my stuff again because
every person and their dog will jack it from me to pad their
palace,” Norris said. “The more I try to hold on to it, the
more they try to get it.”
For people living outside, belongings are survival.
Blankets, identification, medications, and documents can
mean the difference between life and death, especially as
temperatures drop.
Makenna Stark and
Shana Delwiche with
Denver’s Support Team
Assisted Response
check on Holly Norris,
73, on a cold November
night.
Justice, a Denver-based Facebook group, donated some
sleeping bags to help keep Norris warm.
Asked why she has not been able to get off the streets
during the past 10 years, Norris did not describe a lack of
effort. She described barriers.
She listed housing prices, minimal income from social
security, a physical body that can’t work, and impossible wait
times for housing vouchers.
Norris doesn’t have a case manager, a phone, or an
advocate, she said. She doesn’t know where to start to get
resources.
A little more than two weeks after Norris set up camp
in the alleyway and the subsequent outreach efforts were
underway, Norris and her belongings were gone.
Her whereabouts were unknown at the time this issue was
published. Norris had said she would not move anywhere
but into housing. Her campsite did not show signs of a
hurried displacement: the site was clean. It looked as if a
human had never lived there.
But Norris’ disappearance doesn’t guarantee safety or
housing. For people living outside, unknown whereabouts
signify they were moved along again.
Norris’ story underscores what the data makes clear: the
majority of people experiencing homelessness do not choose
it. Many are navigating loss, displacement, and a system that
moves them along without offering a place to land.
For the past 10 years, Norris never had the choice to be
housed. The only choice she could make was about how to
survive another night outside.
DENVER VOICE
11
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 
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PETTERSEN
HAILS
SUPPORT
ACT
Warns federal healthcare
cuts could cost lives
Photos and Story by Giles Clasen
THE BIPARTISAN REAUTHORIZATION of the SUPPORT for
Patients and Communities Act will fund critical addiction
treatment
programs, U.S. Rep. Brittany Pettersen
of
Colorado said, but she warned that broader federal health
care cuts could cost lives and unravel decades of progress in
treating substance use disorders.
The SUPPORT Act, which Pettersen sponsored with
Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., reauthorizes funding for a range
of substance use disorder programs, including prescription
drug monitoring, naloxone distribution, funding for
Medication-Assisted Treatment, and treatment support
for pregnant and post-partum women struggling with
addiction.
“It reauthorizes funding for critical programs that
Colorado depends on and makes sure that we’re keeping
people alive who are at risk of overdosing from opioids, and
ultimately having the ability to connect them to treatment,”
Pettersen said.
According to Petterson, the passage of the bill
by
is
bittersweet
because she
fears
cuts
the Trump
administration to broader healthcare and Medicaid
programs, weakening treatment options and funding for
individuals facing addiction.
“Without providing people a path to get the care that
they need and to live in recovery, it not only costs taxpayers
significantly more; we’re also going to lose countless lives
unnecessarily,” Pettersen said.
Pettersen said that the Trump administration has caused
U.S. Rep Brittany
Pettersen of Colorado
and her mother link
arms during a recent
visit in Denver.
significant damage by cutting federal programs that oversee and
distribute federal dollars for addiction programs.
She pointed to more than 1,100 layoffs at the Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services Administration, known as SAMHSA,
which are hamstringing the delivery of substance use treatment.
“What’s happening already is that it’s really difficult to
disseminate the dollars that are available federally because of all
the people that they fired with SAMHSA,” Pettersen said. “I’m
grateful to have the dollars from the SUPPORT Act that have the
potential to be utilized, but I’m very realistic with how difficult it
is going to be for states to benefit from them when the layoffs make
implementation very difficult.”
Pettersen said Trump has used the fentanyl crisis to justify many
of his foreign and domestic policies, including tariffs on imports
from China, Mexico, and Canada, and military posturing against
Venezuela.
He has also repeatedly blamed immigrants for smuggling the
drug and used the claim to justify his deportation policies.
“[Trump] used the fentanyl crisis to target the immigrant
community and people of color, and I don’t think he ever actually
12
JANUARY 2026
׉	 7cassandra://ua0NyTMwLzBUjBxRFizxHuvsbplowg8ZrBj4wlEhwew R` iXqn4n,G׉E~cared about the people that were losing their lives to addiction in
the United States,” Pettersen said.
In December, Trump signed an Executive Order designating
Fentanyl a Weapon of Mass Destruction.
Democrats held up the SUPPORT Act’s reauthorization in the
spring of 2025, despite near-unanimous support for the bill when it
passed in 2018.
“I am confused [that] we are working on the SUPPORT Act
while [the] administration is working independently of Congress
to undermine its aims,” Colorado Rep. Diana DeGette said in an
interview with Politico last April, as the bill stalled in the House
Energy and Commerce Committee.
Beyond staffing cuts, Pettersen said changes to federal Medicaid
waiver policy could have life-threatening consequences for people
seeking treatment.
She cited new restrictions on the Section 1115 waiver, which
Colorado and 39 other states have used to expand access to
substance use disorder care through Medicaid.
Section 1115 waivers allow states to expand Medicaid coverage
beyond traditional limits when they can demonstrate cost
savings over time, a tool Colorado has relied on to fund addiction
treatment.
In 2020, Pettersen helped usher in Colorado’s waiver that offers
individuals on Medicaid access to substance use disorder treatment.
Under the waiver, states were allowed to cover services not
traditionally reimbursed by Medicaid if they could show long-term
cost savings. Pettersen said new federal language now requires
states to prove immediate cost neutrality, a standard she called
impossible to meet.
Pettersen said the change effectively eliminates the waiver as a
tool to treat individuals.
“What’s happening at the federal level to our entire health care
system is just devastating,” she said. “It’s gut-wrenching to think
about the lives that we are going to lose unnecessarily.”
Pettersen’s advocacy on addiction policy is deeply personal. She
has spoken publicly about her mother’s struggles with substance use
disorder and the impact it had on her growing up. She struggled to
find help and care for her mother because treatment options were
financially out of reach.
“People like my mom, who are unable to afford the care that they
need, are going to be left with nowhere to go,” Pettersen said. “The
state of Colorado and the federal government spent over $1 million
in one year keeping her alive while she was in critical condition
from overdosing instead of providing access to the medical care that
she needed.”
Pettersen said eliminating Medicaid waivers as a funding tool for
treatment is short-sighted and deadly for those who can’t find care.
“This is a health condition, and we need to treat it that way,”
Pettersen said. “Without providing people a path to get the care
that they need, and to live in recovery, we’re costing taxpayers
significantly more over time. We’re also going to lose countless
lives.”
The SUPPORT Act does not replace Medicaid coverage or the
1115 waiver, Pettersen explained, but instead reauthorizes funding
for programs that Medicaid cannot cover.
Pettersen said much of the federal legislation reshaping health
and social service programs will not take effect until after the
midterm elections, giving Colorado limited time to prepare.
“This is going to hit us across the United States and decimate the
progress that we’ve made,” she said.
Pettersen said stigma remains one of the biggest barriers to
addiction treatment and said she feels a responsibility to continue
advocating for people with substance use disorder.
“Stigma around addiction is very real,” she said. “It’s the greatest
barrier that people face in getting the care that they need. I will
never stop fighting for people like my mom who have a medical
condition and not a moral failing.”
While she described the moment as difficult, Pettersen said she
draws hope from local efforts in Colorado.
“The hope that I have is in the people I see every day on the
ground who are rolling up their sleeves to fill critical needs,”
Pettersen said. “It’s going to be a rough road ahead, but in Colorado,
we are resilient.”
PUZZLES
PUZZLES COURTESY OF STREET WISE
A P R O N S M S H I M M Y H C
L F W J G H P T A T G A R B H
A F E O C A P E A N R S L I P
Y C T Z O W E T N B O K D B S
E O E T B L I G A C A R H A T
T A V W S U L E D R E R A M O
T T E E S H S Y J O B R D K L
E W Q E S O O B M M L O F R E
X G T D H T X E Y P S M O C K
I B U S H J A C K E T Y A S I
W O N T T K H T U R B A N N H
C O I H A L T E R S A R I S E
O T C O I M A N T L E M A B P
W S L O L J E R S E Y S O C K
L C M D S H R O U D P R U F F
SEARCH
Anorak
Apron
Bib
Boots
Bra
Busby
Bush jacket
Cape
Cloak
Coat
Cowl
Dolman
Fez
Garb
Halter
Hat
8 5
3
9
4
7
3
8 6
2
DENVER VOICE
3
9
6 8 5
5
7
2
3 7 1
13
Hood
Hose
Jersey
Layette
Mantle
Mask
Mini
Robe
9
Rompers
Ruff
Sari
Sash
Shawl
Shimmy
Shoe
Shroud
2
4
Slip
Smock
Sock
Spencer
Stole
Suit
Tabard
Tails
Tam
Tarboosh
Togs
Tunic
Turban
Tweeds
Vest
Woolly
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IMPORTANT PART ABOUT MOVING
FROM 2025 TO 2026?
This column is a place for
Denver VOICE vendors to
respond to questions from
fellow vendors, our readers,
and staff.
This month’s question was
suggested by Steve Anson.
I
do
not
know
whether Trump ever
suggested such a
thing. It is a terrifying
vision of the country,
though, and for that
reason, I decided to
participate in this
month’s Ask a Vendor
feature.
STEVE ANSON
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
Mark Twain once
said that a lie will get
halfway around the
world before the truth
has time to get its
boots on. I use that
quotation because I
am an op-ed writer.
I saw on reddit.com
a few weeks ago
that Donald Trump
suggested
that
people are here to
serve the corporate
state.
The “editorial” part
of “op-ed” implies
that it’s my job
to suggest even
civil actions to my
readers. I do no such
thing. Most of what
I write relates my
personal experiences
to my readers in a
hopefully cohesive,
intelligent way.
In
this case, the editor
of the VOICE asked
what suggestions
vendors had for
folks struggling with
transitioning
from
2025
Year.
to
the
New
Though I grumble
unhappily at giving
advice, here goes.
Ask not what your
country can do for
you, ask what you
can
do
Trump.
for
Donald
Beyond
that, notice when
someone does a
good job at whatever
they are tasked with,
simply be nice to
that someone. Then,
be nice to someone
for no reason at
all. Then, be nice
because, it being
winter, you don’t
have to endure yet
another
Rockies
game. Be nice.
TYRONZER SANDERS
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
JERRY ROSEN
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
I don’t think it’s
diffi cult to start a
New
Year.
Ending
a year means you
have a chance to put
the past year into
perspective. If I set
goals that I didn’t
achieve, I can start
the New Year on the
right foot and try to
change it so I can
achieve my goals
this time.
I didn’t get to
complete all of my
goals I set out to
achieve in 2025.
The New Year means
a new opportunity
to complete those
goals.
Please be sure to write
your vendor’s name
in the comments!
Starting a New Year
is not diffi cult if you
take the time to look
at what happened
over the past year
and decide to take
the opportunity to
make changes to
make things a little
better than
before.
LANDO ALLEN
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
If you would like
to help out a
specifi c vendor
by donating
a few extra
dollars, scan
the QR code to
make a payment
through Venmo.
Thank you!
WINTER
Wishlist
Drop-offs are accepted Wednesdays,
10 a.m.-1 p.m., or by appointment.
NEW ITEMS NEEDED:
GENTLY-USED ITEMS NEEDED:
• Bottled water
• Non-perishable snacks (granola bars,
peanut butter crackers, trail mix, etc.)
• Toiletries (individual or travel-size)
• Lip balm, sunscreen, shampoo, conditioner,
lotion, toothpaste, deoderant, hand sanitizer
• Hand warmers
• Baseball caps
• Socks
• Men’s shoes or boots (sizes 8-12)
• Men’s jackets (sizes L, XL, XXL)
• Women’s jackets (sizes M, L, XL)
• Backpacks, carrier bags
• Scarves
• Gloves
• Winter hats
During the winter, Denver VOICE vendors experience increased
heating and housing costs. Meanwhile, their income decreases
because cold temperatures means less foot traffic and
fewer paper sales. Every donation counts. Thank you.
14
JANUARY 2026
׉	 7cassandra://CeMsMEWANob2wupXcKo4laFGo23SzEUakGaExDKLDUQ-` iXqn4n,G׉E)zRESOURCE LIST
MEDICAL / MENTAL HEALTH / DENTAL
SERVICES
ACS COMMUNITY LIFT: 5045 W. 1st Ave., Denver; https://
rentassistance.org
DENVER HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER: 777 Bannock St.; https://www.
denverhealth.org
DETOX LOCAL: Features information including mental health and
substance use resources specifically for the AAPI (American Asian
and Pacific Islander) community; http://www.detoxlocal.com
DRUG REHAB USA: Addiction hotline - 888-479-0446; Organizations
that take Medicaid: http://www.drugrehabus.org/rehabs/
treatment/medicaid/united-states/colorado/denver
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER: 112 E. 8th Ave.; 303-572-7800;
HIV/Hep C/ Gonorrhea/ Chlamydia testing available. Services are
restricted to active IV Drug Users. Offers clean syringes to active
users, as well as safety training on proper disposal of dirty syringes;
M-F – 9am-12pm: http://www.harmreductionactioncenter.org
INNER CITY HEALTH CENTER: 3800 York St.; Emergency walk-ins - 303296-1767;
Dental – 303-296-4873; M-F - 8am-2pm
LIVER HEALTH CONNECTION: 1325 S. Colorado Blvd.; Suite B302;
Resources and support for those affected by Hep C. Free Hep C
testing offered; 800-522-4372, 800-359-9272; info@hepcconnection.org;
https://www.viventhealth.org
NATIONAL AIDS HOTLINE: 800-342-AIDS/800-344-7432
NATIONAL SUICIDE PREVENTION LIFELINE: Text or call 988; https://
www.988lifeline.org
NATIONAL RUNAWAY SAFELINE: 800-RUNAWAY/800-786-2929; https://
www.1800runaway.org
RAPE ABUSE AND INCEST NATIONAL NETWORK: 800-656-HOPE; https://
www.rainn.org
SALUD CLINIC: 6255 Quebec Pkwy, Commerce City; 303-697-2583,
970-484-0999; https://www.saludclinic.org/commerce-city
STOUT STREET CLINIC: 2130 Stout St.; 303-293-2220; Clinic hours for
new and established patients - M, T, Th, F - 7am-4pm, W - 9am6pm;
https://www.coloradocoalition.org/healthcare
SUBSTANCE ABUSE REHAB GUIDE: HELPLINE – 888-493-4670; https://
www.detoxrehabs.net/states/colorado/
U.S. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE HOTLINE: 800-799-7233 (English and
Spanish); 800-243-7889 (TDD); https://www.thehotline.org
EMERGENCY SHELTER
INDIVIDUALS IN NEED OF SHELTER ARE ENCOURAGED TO GO TO “FRONT
DOOR” SHELTER ACCESS POINTS:
• For individual men – Denver Rescue Mission Lawrence Street
Community Center, 2222 Lawrence St.
• For individual women – Samaritan House, 2301 Lawrence St.
• For youth ages 15-20 – Urban Peak, 1630 S. Acoma St.
• Families in need of shelter should call the Connection Center at
303-295-3366.
ADDITIONALLY, DENVER PARKS AND RECREATION WILL OPEN ALL
CURRENTLY OPERATING RECREATION CENTERS AS DAYTIME WARMING
CENTERS DURING REGULAR BUSINESS HOURS ON FRIDAY, NOV. 8 AND
SATURDAY, NOV. 9, FOR PEOPLE WHO NEED A PLACE TO WARM UP.
Denver Public Library locations are also available during regular
business hours. Double-check library hours: denverlibrary.org/
locations.
For more information about shelter access, visit denvergov.org/
findshelter or text INDOORS to 67283 for updates.
DROP-IN DAYTIME CENTERS
HAVEN OF HOPE: 1101 W. 7th Ave.; 303-607-0855; Mon.-Fri. 7am1pm.
Private showers & bathrooms, laundry, lunch, etc; https://
www.thoh.org
THE GATHERING PLACE: 1535 High St.; 303-321-4198; Mon., Wed.-Fri.
8:30am-5pm, Tues. 8:30am-1:30pm; Daytime drop-in center for
women, their children, and transgender individuals; Meals,
computer lab, phones, food bank, clothing, art programs, GED
tutoring, referrals to other services, etc; https://www.tgpdenver.org
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER: 231 East Colfax; Mon.-Fri. 9am12pm;
303-572-7800; Provides clean syringes, syringe disposal,
harm-reduction counseling, safe materials, Hep C/HIV education,
and health education classes; https://www.
harmreductionactioncenter.org
LAWRENCE STREET COMMUNITY CENTER: 2222 Lawrence St.; 303-2940157;
day facility, laundry, showers, restrooms, access to services
DENVER VOICE
15
FOR INDIVIDUALS IN DENVER EXPERIENCING
HOMELESSNESS OR FINANCIAL INSTABILITY.
DENVERVOICE.ORG/RESOURCE-LIST
https://www.homelessassistance.us/li/lawrence-street-communitycenter
OPEN
DOOR MINISTRIES: 1567 Marion St.; Mon.-Fri. 7am-5:30pm.
Drop-in center; bathrooms, coffee/tea, snacks, resources, WIFI
https://www.odmdenver.org
T. FRANCIS CENTER: 303-297-1576; 2323 Curtis St. 6am-6pm daily.
Storage for one bag (when space is available). Satellite Clinic hoursMon.,
Tues., Thurs, Fri. 7:30am-3:30pm; Wed. 12:30-4:30pm
https://www.sfcdenver.org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES: 846 E. 18th Ave. For those 60+. TV room,
bus tokens, mental/physical health outreach, and more. https://
www.seniorsupportservices.org
SOX PLACE (YOUTH SERVICES): 2017 Larimer St. Daytime drop-in
shelter for youth 12-30 years old. Meals, socks, clothing bank,
personal hygiene supplies, internet access, intentional mentoring
and guidance, crisis intervention, referrals to other services. Tues.Fri.
12-4pm & Sat. 11-2pm. https://www.soxplace.com
THE SPOT AT URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): 2100 Stout St. 303-2910442.
Drop-in hours Mon.-Fri. 8-11am.
YOUTH AGED 15-20 IN NEED OF IMMEDIATE OVERNIGHT SHELTER SERVICES:
303-974-2928 https://www.urbanpeak.org/denver/programs-andservices/drop-in-center
URBAN
PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): Youth 14-24 in Denver and Colorado
Springs. Overnight shelter, food, clothing, showers, case workers,
job skills and training, ID and birth certificate assistance, GED
assistance, counseling and housing. 730 21st St. 303-974-2900
https://www. urbanpeak.org
FREE MEALS
CAPITOL HEIGHTS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: 1100 Fillmore St., Sat. lunch
at 11:30am; https://www.capitolheightspresbyterian.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES: https://www.mealsforpoor.org
CATHEDRAL OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION: 1530 Logan St.;
sandwiches & coffee Mon.-Fri. 8:30am; https://www.
denvercathedral.org
CHRIST’S BODY MINISTRIES: 850 Lincoln; Mon. closed, Tues.-Thurs.
10am-3pm, Fri. 8am-11pm; groceries & hot meal on Sat. at 2pm (at
16th & York); Sun. church service at 6pm, dinner at 7pm; https://
www.christsbody.org
CHRIST IN THE CITY: Home-cooked meal, weekly; Lunch in the Park is
on Wednesdays from 12-1 at Benedict Fountain Park (Tremont and
22nd); https://www.christinthecity.org
CITYSQUARE DENVER: 2575 S. Broadway; 303-783-3777; Food pantry
Tues. 10am-6pm; https://www.citysquare.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES: 1820 Broadway (in front of
Trinity United Methodist Church); Hot meals served M, T, Th., F -
11:45-12:15; https://www.mealsforpoor.org
DENVER RESCUE MISSION: 1130 Park Avenue West; 303-294-0157; 3
meals 7 days/week, 5:30am, 12pm, 6pm; https://www.
denverrescuemission.org
HAVEN OF HOPE: 1101 W. 7th Ave.; 303-607-0855; M-F. 7am-1pm.
Not open weekends; Breakfast is at 8am, lunch is served at 11am;
https://www.havenofhope.org
HARE KRISHNA TEMPLE: 1400 Cherry St., free vegetarian feast on Sun.,
6:45-7:30pm; https://www.krishnadenver.com
HIS LOVE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH: 910 Kalamath St.; Community dinner
on Thurs., 6-6:45pm, Men’s breakfast 1st Sat. of the month, 8-10am,
Women’s breakfast 2nd Sat., 9-11am; https://www.hislovefellowship.
org
HOLY GHOST CATHOLIC CHURCH: 1900 California St.; Sandwiches,
M-Sat., 10-10:30am; https://www.holyghostchurch.org
OPEN DOOR MINISTRIES: 1567 Marion St.; 303-830-2201; Sat.
morning breakfast: 8am, Sun. dinner (required church attendance
at 4:30pm); meal served at 6pm; https://www.odmdenver.org/home
ST. ELIZABETH’S: Speer Blvd. & Arapahoe St. on Auraria Campus, 7
days/week, 11:00am; Food, coffee; https://www.stelizabethdenver.
org
ST. FRANCIS CENTER: 2323 Curtis St., Wed. & Fri. 3-4:30pm (except
third Wed. of each month); https://www.sfcdenver.org
SAME CAFÉ: 2023 E. Colfax Ave; 720-530-6853;Restaurant serving
mostly organic food—not free, but pay what you can or work off
your meal in the kitchen; Open Mon.-Sat., 11am to 2pm, Closed
Sun. & holidays; https://www.soallmayeat.org
VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA: 2877 Lawrence St., breakfast (8am), lunch
(11:30am), dinner (5pm) Mon.-Thurs., 12pm on Fri., 1pm on Sun.
Food & clothing bank 9:30am-4pm Mon.-Thurs.; https://www.
voacolorado.org/gethelp-denvermetro-foodnutrition-themission
LGBTQ+ SUPPORT
THE TREVOR PROJECT: 866-488-7386: https://www.thetrevorproject.
org
LGBT NATIONAL YOUTH TALKLINE: 800-246-7743: https://www.
lgbthotline.org/youth-talkline
PRIDE INSTITUTE: 800-547-7433
TRUE COLORS UNITED: 212-461-4401, https://www.truecolorsunited.
org
VETERANS & SENIORS
DENVER INNER CITY PARISH: 1212 Mariposa St.; 303-322-5733; VOA
Dining Center for Seniors, aged 60 and older, W-Sat. 9am-12pm;
Food Bank, W-F; Tickets at 9am, food bank open 10am-12pm; dicp.
org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES: 846 E. 18th Ave.; For those aged 60 or
older; TV room, bus tokens, mental/physical health outreach, 3
meals, M-F -7am-7pm; Sun. 11am-4pm; https://www.
seniorsupportservices.org
VA MEDICAL CENTER: 1700 N Wheeling St.; Aurora 303-399-8020:
https://www.va.gov/findlocations/facility/vha_554A5
VETERANS GUIDE: https://www.veteransguide.org; Veterans
Disability Calculator https://www.veteransguide.org/va-disabilitycalculator
YOUTH
SERVICES
SOX PLACE (YOUTH SERVICES): 2017 Larimer St.;
303-296-3412Daytime drop-in shelter for youth 12-30; Meals,
socks, clothing bank, personal hygiene supplies, internet access,
intentional mentoring and guidance, crisis intervention, referrals
to other services. T-F - 12-4pm & Sat. 11am-2pm. Instagram: @
Soxplace
THE SPOT AT URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): 2100 Stout St. 303-2910442;
Youth aged 15-20 in need of immediate overnight shelter
services, 303-974-2928; Drop-in hours Mon.-Fri. 8-11am https://
www.urbanpeak.org/denver/programs-and-services/drop-incenter
SUNSHINE
BEHAVIORAL HEALTH (YOUTH SERVICES): 833-931-2484;
Services for youth facing substance abuse, addiction, mental health
disorders, or a combination of these conditions; https://www.
sunshinebehavioralhealth.com
URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): 730 21st St., Denver; 303-974-2900;
Ages14-24; Serving Denver & Colo Springs; Overnight shelter, food,
clothing, showers, case workers, job skill/straining, ID and birth
certificate assistance, GED assistance, counseling and housing;
https://www. urbanpeak.org
A P R O N S M S H I M M Y H C
L F W J G H P T A T G A R B H
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