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2
SUGGESTED
DONATION
@DenverVOICE
SURVIVING
COVID ON
THE NA T
AJO
RESERVTION
LIFE WAS DIFFICULT ENOUGH FOR THE NAAJO
PEOPLE. THEN COVID-19 HIT PAGE 8
STATE HOUSING
POLICY DURING
PANDEMIC
SCORES LOW
RESEARCHERS GIVE LOW GRADE
FOR STATE’S FAILURE TO AID
THOSE FACING EVICTION.
PAGE 4
RESTORING
VOTING RIGHTS
TO FLORIDA’S
EX-FELONS
FORMER LAWYER TAKES
CAREER BREAK TO REGAIN
VOTING RIGHTS FOR EX-FELONS.
PAGE 10
NEW BILL
ADDRESSES
FOOD
INSTABILITY
SINCE THE PANDEMIC, ONE
IN THREE COLORADANS
FACES FOOD INSTABILITY.
PAGE 6
VOICES OF
OUR COMMUNITY
PAGES 4, 5, 11
EVENTS / PUZZLES
PAGE 13
RESOURCES
PAGE 15
NOVEMBER 2020 | Vol.25 Issue 11
SINCE 1997, WE HAVE PROVIDED AN OPPORTUNITY FOR THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE TO WORK. DONATE TODAY TO ENSURE OUR VENDORS CONTINUE TO HAVE JOBS. (DENVERVOICE.ORG)
FROM YOUR VENDOR:
JOYCE DALE SITS IN THE KITCHEN OF HER 50-YEAR-OLD HOUSE. DALE HAD A STROKE SIX YEARS AGO AND HAS BEEN IN A WHEELCHAIR SINCE. HER HOME HAS BEEN IN DISREPAIR FOR DECADES BECAUSE OF THE BENNET FREEZE. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
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9ׁH $http://denvervoice.org/subscriptionsׁׁЈנ_݀jL5 ˁ9ׁHmailto:program@denvervoice.orgׁׁЈנ_݀jL5 ̢9ׁHmailto:ads@denvervoice.orgׁׁЈנ_݀jL5 сu9ׁHhttp://denvervoice.orgׁׁЈ׉EEDITOR’S NOTE
ELISABETH MONAGHAN
MANAGING EDITOR
WHEN VENDORS VISIT the Denver
VOICE office to pick up their
papers, either they will tell me,
or I will overhear them telling
someone else about someone
they met or conversations they
had while vending the VOICE.
Frequently, when someone stops
long enough to focus on what the
vendor is telling them about the
VOICE and suggests a $2 donation
in return for a copy of the paper,
the passer-by will ask something like, “Why should I give
you $2 for that paper?”
Hearing vendor Raelene Johnson talk about her latest
encounter with someone who asked why the paper was
worth $2 was what prompted the Ask a Vendor question
for this issue. (For those who are not familiar with how the
process works, Denver VOICE vendors purchase each of
their papers for 50 cents. Anything they receive over that
amount is theirs to keep, so for the suggested donation
amount of $2, the vendor keeps $1.50.)
Sometimes, a vendor’s response to the question in Ask a
Vendor is just a few words. Other times, it is a long answer
woven around an experience, but before they answer, every
one of the vendors takes time to think about the question.
If, as you read this or some future issue of the VOICE,
you wonder how the vendors might react to or think about
a situation, I hope you will take a minute to send an email
to editor@denvervoice.org and let me know. That way, we
can pose that question to our vendors. Not only does this
give the Denver VOICE community a chance to get to know
the vendors better and learn more about the difference a
donation makes to a vendor, but it also gives the vendors
another opportunity for their voices to be heard. ■
NOVEMBER CONTRIBUTORS
PAULA BARD is an award-winning fine art
photographer, writer, and activist. She lives
on a mountain top southwest of Denver.
DENVERVOICE.ORG
CE.ORG
@OCE
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Jennifer Seybold
GILES CLASEN is a freelance photographer
who regularly contributes his work to the
VOICE for editorial projects, fundraisers,
and events. He has also served on the
VOICE’s Board of Directors.
MANAGING EDITOR
Elisabeth Monaghan
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
Andrew Klooster
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
Hannah Bragg
ROBERT DAVIS is a freelance reporter for the
Denver VOICE. His work has also appeared
in Colorado Public Works Journal, Fansided,
Colorado Journal, and Medium.com.
VOLUNTEER COPY EDITORS
Kate Marshall
Aaron Sullivan
Laura Wing
PHOTOGRAPHERS/ILLUSTRATORS
Paula Bard
Giles Clasen
WHAT WE DO
The Denver VOICE empowers homeless, impoverished, and
transient individuals by creating job opportunities through
our vendor program. We give our vendors a job and help
them tell their stories; this creates a space for them to be part
of a community again.
Vendors purchase copies of the VOICE for 50 cents each
at our distribution center. This money pays for a portion
of our production costs. Vendors can buy as many papers
as they want; they then sell those papers to the public for
a suggested $2 donation. The difference in cost ($1.50) is
theirs to keep.
WHO WE ARE
The Denver VOICE is a nonprofit that publishes a monthly
street newspaper. Our vendors are men and women in the
metro Denver area experiencing homelessness and poverty.
Since 2007, we have put more than 4,000 vendors to work.
Our mission is to facilitate a dialogue addressing the roots
of homelessness by telling stories of people whose lives
are impacted by poverty and homelessness and to offer
economic, educational, and empowerment opportunities
for the impoverished community.
We are an award-winning publication, a member of the
International Network of Street Papers and the Colorado
Press Association, and we abide by the Society of
Professional Journalists code of ethics.
WRITERS
Paula Bard
Rea Brown
Giles Clasen
Jerome Cotton
Robert Davis
Shaleen Vanese Figueroa
Raelene Johnson
Jerry Mullenix
Benjamin Eric Nelson
Janis Olson
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Nikki Lawson, President
Michelle Stapleton, Vice President
Lori Holland, Treasurer
Jeff Cuneo, Secretary
Donovan Cordova
Raelene Johnson
Josh Kauer
Craig Solomon
Zephyr Wilkins
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT editor@denvervoice.org
VENDOR PROGRAM program@denvervoice.org • (720) 320-2155
ADVERTISING ads@denvervoice.org
MAILING ADDRESS PO Box 1931, Denver CO 80201
VENDOR OFFICE 1600 Downing St., Ste. 230, Denver, CO 80218
With the money they make selling the VOICE, vendors are
able to pay for their basic needs. Our program provides
vendors with an immediate income and a support group
of dedicated staff members and volunteers. Vendors are
independent contractors who receive no base pay.
OFFICE HOURS: For the immediate future, we will be open on
Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Orientation is held every day we are open.
New vendors must arrive between 9 and 10 a.m.
2 DENVER VOICE November 2020
STAFF
CONTRIBUTORS
BOARD
CONTACT US
׉	 7cassandra://nwj0E5dPHb4CRHBy7ZqBORo1dAUEyPoQzAUEwGn7ugo!W` _jL5׉EVOICES OF OUR COMMUNITY
INTRODUCING OUR NEW
PROGRAM COORDINATOR,
ANDREW KLOOSTER
LAST MONTH, we introduced Denver VOICE readers to our
new program coordinator, Andrew Klooster. Klooster
recently relocated to Denver from Cleveland, Ohio, where
he worked for the Doan Brook Watershed Partnership.
Kooster has a B.A. in anthropology and sustainability
from the University of Michigan and an M.S. in natural
resources and environment with a focus on environmental
justice from the University of Michigan School of Natural
Resources and Environment.
The timing of Klooster’s arrival at the Denver VOICE
could not have been better for the organization. With new
safety and social distancing protocols in place in response to
the COVID-19 pandemic, the VOICE and its vendors have
had to make a number of adjustments. From the moment
he arrived, Klooster has focused on getting to know the
vendors, catching up on paperwork, moving forward with
best practices, and identifying areas in need of improvement.
As program coordinator for the VOICE, Klooster oversees
the Peer Navigation Program and works closely with
Denver VOICE vendors to meet our mission of providing
individuals experiencing homelessness or poverty a chance
to take their first steps towards a more stable life. ■
OUR Streets: MARK
BY PAULA BARD
“I’M 44, I DID EIGHT YEARS in the United States Marine Corps,
2000-2008. Then, after that, I became a New Mexico State
Police officer.
I came from New Mexico, I was living in Longmont, me
and my wife. She passed away on me. She had a pacemaker.
She was living on life support. I gave up on her, I lost her.
I couldn’t take it no more. So, I left Longmont. That’s how
I ended up down here. This was October 14, last year, 9:02
a.m. Every day after work, I went down to the hospital just to
be next to her, hold her hand, you know, stuff like that.
I been through a lot, man. I lost my brother, I lost my
gramma, I lost my niece. There are a lot of uncles and
aunties I lost. Everything went downhill ever since I lost my
wife. So, I am working on picking myself up right now. But at
the same time, it’s not working. Cuz of all this peer pressure
that’s around me. You know what I mean?
I mean, at some point, I’ve got to think about my health,
too. It’s a main issue. A lot of people told me a lot of things to
do, different ways. But it’s up to me.
I am a Navajo, Diné, full blood.” ■
Author’s Note: In the fall of 2015, just ahead of Colorado’s winter, Denver sent
the full force of its police department and SWAT team to destroy five tiny
homes that people “living without homes” had built north of downtown.
Something in me snapped: Denver is behaving like a bully!
Denver has more than 6,000 people without homes, and more than 3,000
trying to survive on its streets. It is an ugly business. In 2012, Denver passed an
urban-camping ban making it illegal for the homeless to protect themselves
with “any form of cover or protection from the elements other than clothing.”
Violations can bring a $999 fine or a year in jail.
I began walking those streets where the homeless are trying to survive,
photographing the faces and collecting the stories of those my city has
abandoned. So began OUR Streets – stories of Denver’s unhoused residents.
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
HOW TO HELP
The money we take in from vendors helps us cover a portion of our printing
costs, but we depend largely on donations from individuals, businesses,
and foundations to help us pay our rent and keep the lights on.
DONATE
Donations to the Denver VOICE are tax-deductable.
Go to denvervoice.org to give a one-time or recurring donation.
You can also mail a check to:
Denver VOICE | P.O. Box 1931 | Denver, CO 80201
GET THE WORD OUT
We rely on grassroots marketing to get the word
out about what we do. Talk to people about our
organization and share us with your network.
Support us on
@denverVOICE
ADVERTISE
Our readership is loyal, well-educated, and socially concerned. Readers
view purchasing the paper as a way to immediately help a person
who is poor or homeless while supporting long-term solutions to end
poverty. If you are interested in placing an ad or sponsoring a section of
the paper, please contact us about rates at ads@denvervoice.org.
VOLUNTEER
We need volunteers to help with everything from newspaper
distribution to event planning and management.
Contact program@denvervoice.org for volunteering information.
SUBSCRIBE
If you are unable to regularly purchase a newspaper from our vendors, please
consider a subscription. We ask subscribers to support our program with a 12-month
pledge to give $10 a month, or a one-time donation of $120. Subscriptions help us
cover our costs AND provide an amazing opportunity to those who need it most.
Go to denvervoice.org/subscriptions for more information.
November 2020 DENVER VOICE 3
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ASK A
VENDOR
Because the pandemic has affected vendors
differently, we hope to give all of our vendors
a chance to tell their stories. Some are
vendors we’re hearing from for the first
time since we started printing again.
When someone asks,
“Why should I donate $2 for the paper?”
what do you tell them?
Q
A
REA BROWN
Who are we kidding? Something’s missing far from social distancing
and face covering. Everyone seems to sound a death knell as they
spray paint on the wall. Although many try to stay calm and stand
tall, the hushed whispers call, screaming, “It’s all gonna fall.”
Good thing we can trust the law, or, should I say, can we trust the
law? After all, we saw and see in real life and TV or PC, the police
policing harshly is starting to be a recurring news theme. Protesting,
grouping and burning, in the midst of campaigning, COVID,
and burning.
Yet, I stand under the economy, not returning, learning how to
survive with low or no earnings, trying my best to evade germing. But
I have a paper to vend with my sanitized hand. So, what I would say
to the woman or man who asks why should they give $2? What I can
say is one good deed is multiplied in three different ways, 12 times a
year, and that to me, is an awfully small price to pay.
RAELENE JOHNSON
This paper is the best thing that ever happened for homeless
people. The VOICE doesn’t care if you’re a convicted felon, or have no
education, no job history or references.
I became a vendor in Jan of 08. I’d been homeless and living under
the Arapahoe Bridge in Boulder. The VOICE gave me a chance to be
self-employed. By January of 09, I was the top female VOICE vendor,
and boy, did that give me pride. [Vending] the newspaper has given
me self-esteem. It gives people an opportunity, and it’s up to you
what you do with that. The paper has allowed me to become who I
was meant to be, and now, 13 years later, I have my own home, my
own car. I’m even on the board and treated as a valued member of
the organization. So, your $2 donation empowers and impacts a
vendor’s life. It gives them an opportunity for a home, and maybe
a vendor eventually leaves the paper, but while they’re vending, it
gives them money until they find what they really want to do. Or
someone like me, who can’t get a job anywhere else, can work here as
long as they want to.
WHAT DO YOU WANT TO ASK?
We would like to engage more Denver VOICE
vendors and readers. If you have a question
or issue you would like vendors to discuss,
please email community@denvervoice.org.
4 DENVER VOICE November 2020
EXPERTS GIVE COLORADO’S
COVID-19 HOUSING POLICY
HALF-STAR REVIEW
BY ROBERT DAVIS
A RECENT REVIEW of state COVID-19 housing policies by
Eviction Lab, a team of housing and poverty researchers at
Princeton University, rated Colorado’s response a half-star out
of five for failing to provide basic protections and assistance
programs for those facing eviction because of the pandemic.
Colorado’s half-star rating was good enough for an 18thplace
finish in Eviction Lab’s 50-state COVID-19 Housing
Policy Scorecard report. Massachusetts earned first-place
honors with a score of 4.15.
The report was compiled in consultation with state housing
and homelessness lawyers and advocates, along with tenant
groups and public health experts from around the country. The
data is current as of September 12.
Each state was scored after researchers analyzed state
governor emergency declarations, state legislation, and
court orders. They focused on state prohibitions on initiating
evictions, suspension of court procedures, enforcement
of eviction orders, short-term assistance, and tenancy
preservation measures.
According to Eviction Lab’s website, the two categories that
were most influential in a state’s review were “initiation” (40
percent) and “tenancy preservation measures” (20 percent).
As for initiation protections, Governor Polis signed an order
on June 13 allowing landlords to begin evictions proceedings
against tenants who are behind on their rent.
On the other side, Colorado law offers its nearly two million
renters scant protections. Landlords are allowed to initiate
evictions for nonpayment after providing the tenant a 30day
notice, can evict tenants who have experienced financial
hardship caused by the pandemic, and can evict tenants for
non-emergency reasons.
Colorado has just as few tenant preservation measures,
according to Eviction Lab. State law allows landlords
to
raise rents during the pandemic and does not guarantee
legal representation for tenants who face eviction. Instead,
courts rely on eviction defense fund grants from the General
Assembly to fund legal defenses. In 2020, the lawmakers
appropriated $350,000 to the Eviction Legal Defense Fund.
In September, the CDC published a rule in the Federal
Register placing a nationwide moratorium on evictions
through the end of the year. However, the rule didn’t reach all
renters and only covered renters in federal housing. Absent
local protections, as many as 40 million people could have been
at risk for eviction, according to CDC estimates.
The moratorium had three goals: keep people in their homes
and out of congregate housing, stop the increase of people
experiencing homelessness, and inspire states to pass their own
eviction protections. Had eviction been allowed to proceed,
it could contribute to an increase in homelessness, a class of
people the CDC says are a high-risk population.
“It may be more difficult for these persons to consistently
access the necessary resources in order to adhere to public
health recommendations to prevent COVID-19. For instance,
it may not be possible to avoid certain congregate settings
such as homeless shelters, or easily access facilities to engage in
handwashing with soap and water,” the moratorium says.
While housing advocates are hopeful Colorado lawmakers
will step in and pass a moratorium similar to the CDC’s, they
are also preparing for the alternative.
Colorado Village Collaborative (CVC) recently debuted
its model temporary safe outdoor space, a sanctioned
campsite that would provide homeless residents basic
services and connect them with employment options and
treatment programs.
Some of the services offered would include food, clean
drinking water, handwashing stations, laundry, and shower
units. CVC plans to provide residents with tents, self-care
baskets with hygienic products, and weather-proof storage
containers that they can take with them upon departure.
ABOUT EVICTION LAB
Eviction Lab was founded by Matthew Desmond, who began
studying poverty, housing, and eviction in 2008. Through his
research, Desmond discovered that eviction is often the cause,
not a symptom, of poverty. His work was summarized in the
book Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City (2016).
He currently serves as the Maurice P. During Professor of
Sociology at Princeton University.
According to its website, Eviction Lab receives funding from
the Gates, JPB, and Ford Foundations, as well as the Chan
Zuckerberg Initiative.
Eviction Lab hosts nationwide eviction data on its website
to provide educators, policymakers, nonprofit organizers, and
communities statistically-driven understanding of eviction at
a local level.
If you want to know more, visit Eviction Lab’s website:
https://evictionlab.org/ ■
NEW REPORT FINDS METRO
DENVER’S HOMELESS
DISPROPORTIONATELY
BLACK, INDIGENOUS, AND
PEOPLE OF COLOR
BY ROBERT DAVIS
BLACK, INDIGENOUS, and people of color experience
homelessness at significantly higher rates than their white
counterparts in the Denver metro area, a new report by the
Metro Denver Housing Initiative (MDHI) concluded.
The report synthesized information from the sevencounty
body and federal data from the Point in Time Count,
the Homelessness Management Information System, The
Vulnerability Index, and the number of students identified by
schools as homeless under the McKinney-Vento Act.
“For the first time, we have real-time data on how many
people are seeking support as a result of homelessness,” Matt
Meyer, executive director of MDHI, said in a statement. “While
there are variances between data sets, one thing is consistent –
racial inequity.”
The report argues against the stereotypical narrative that
homelessness is often caused by drug abuse and mental health
issues. Instead, the report posits high housing costs, loss of work,
and strained relationships with family are the primary causes.
At $471,084, average home values in Denver are more than
twice the national average of $231,000, according to data from
Zillow. Since last year, home values have grown 3.3 percent and
are predicted to grow another 4.4 percent by 2022.
Even though the secretary of state’s office reported
Colorado’s wage growth outpaced national wage growth in
2019, the Colorado Fiscal Institute (CFI) found this growth was
due largely to the detriment of Colorado’s Black, Indigenous,
and people of color because it raised the cost of living and
helped usher low-wage jobs out of the state.
Currently, a minimum-wage worker in Colorado would
need to work 88 hours per week to afford a market-rate twobedroom
apartment, the report found. In Denver specifically,
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the same worker would need to log 100 hours per week to
afford the same home.
Black, Indigenous, and people of color are more likely than
their white counterparts to work minimum-wage jobs, jobs
Colorado has shed faster than the national average since
2016, CFI found. This decline is due to the state’s historic low
unemployment and rising minimum wage, both of which
contribute to the prevalence of part-time employment in lowwage
jobs. CFI found 56 percent of low-wage workers work 30
hours per week.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Black
people have been unemployed twice as frequently as white
people since the COVID pandemic began in March. However,
a report by Colorado Public Radio found they only represent
7.5 percent of unemployment claims filed during that
timeframe. BLS did not report on indigenous populations.
“We have yet to see the full impact of the pandemic,” Jamie
Rife, director of communications and development at MDHI,
said in a statement. “We’re nearing a cliff on evictions. Once
the moratoriums expire at the end of the year, we’ll see the full
impact of households that have fallen months behind on rent,
right as the winter months are at their worst.”
The report argues part of the reason the metro area struggles
with responding to homelessness is that they do not operate
under a consistent definition of the problem. Instead, different
agencies define homelessness based on what part of the
homeless experience they are meant to serve, thus leading to
inconsistencies in data collection and racial reporting.
Another reason is that city planners in the separate counties
update their zoning codes without considering the impact
of those changes on neighboring jurisdictions. So, when
jurisdictions pass restrictive zoning codes that decrease housing
affordability, the impacts ripple throughout the metro area.
The report also mentions ways counties and cities can begin
making lasting impacts on homelessness, like addressing
inequalities in criminal justice, healthcare, and allowing those
who are currently experiencing homelessness to help craft
responses to homelessness.
“As a community, we must strive for racially equitable
response. This begins by
outcomes in our homelessness
recognizing this inequity, measuring this disproportionality at
a population level, and striving to ensure an equitable response
with the ultimate goal of eliminating overrepresentation of any
one population,” it reads. ■
MY STORY
BY JERRY MULLENIX, VOICE VENDOR
MY STORY BEGINS IN IDAHO. I am homeless, and I have been
moving around from state to state. Now I am here, and I have
been fighting for the rights of the homeless in the nation.
I am now in the great state of Colorado. I have bought
three tents and have been living out on the Platte River for
almost a year.
Then I bought a camper, and it caught fire. I was burnt in
it. As soon as it went up, I was out of it. The police took it to
the pound yard, and I went to the hospital for minor burns
to my skin, face, hands and arm.
I went back to the hospital for blood poisoning, and they
put me on antibiotics to get rid of it. ■
WHEN I SEE YOU
BY JEROME COTTON, VOICE VENDOR
When I see you
standing and needing, I feel a pain inside,
my heart is bleeding.
When I see you walking
until your shoes are worn, I do not judge,
I can only mourn.
When I see your sign that reads
“Anything helps,” I want to give,
but I also have no money.
When I see the tent where you live,
I want to tell you a better day is coming.
When I lay my head to sleep,
I see you there.
My heart for you, it weeps.
When I see you there,
I am praying for you, don’t forget I care. ■
NEW ITEMS NEEDED:
Socks
Bottled water,
non-perishable snacks
Hand-warmers, toothpaste,
deodorant, chapstick
Paper products for the office
1” notebooks
NEXT MONTH: WRAPPING PAPER ISSUE!
GENTLY-USED ITEMS NEEDED:
Refurbished laptops or
desktop computers
Heavy jackets
Scarves
VOICE vendors have been busy
coming up with wrapping paper
designs for our December issue.
Keep your eye out next month
for the 2020 creations, and use
them to wrap your holiday gifts!
Winter hats
Gloves
Backpacks
Drop-offs are accepted Monday–Friday,
9–12 p.m.,or schedule a drop-off by
emailing program@denvervoice.org.
AUTUMN
WISH LIST
DENVERVOICE.ORG/VENDOR-NEEDS
November 2020 DENVER VOICE 5
2019 ART BY VOICE VENDOR RAELENE JOHNSCE V
NE JOHNSON
ON
VENDOR RAELENE JOHNSON
2019 ART BY VOICE VENDOR BRIAN AUGUSTINE VOIC VENDOR BRIAN AUCE V
AUGUS
GUS
USTINE
2019 AR
019 ART BY VOICE VENDOR REA BROWNE V
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CREDIT: PAULA BARD
FOOD PANTRY
BILL OFFERS
ONE SOLUTION
FOR FOOD
INSTABILITY
BY PAULA BARD
6 DENVER VOICE November 2020
“ONCE COVID HAPPENED, WHAT REALLY
MATTERED WAS HELPING PEOPLE IMMEDIATELY.”
–Colorado State Representative Lisa Cutter
STATE REPRESENTATIVE LISA CUTTER, who is finishing her first
term representing House District 25 in Jefferson County,
recently explained one of the bills she sponsored during the
2020 legislative session.
“We originated the Food Pantry Bill in the House,” said
Cutter. “It happened very quickly at the end of the legislative
session. [State Representative] Daneya Esgar and I worked on
it with Hunger Free Colorado. People were eager to support it.”
According to the text of Food Pantry Bill, nearly one in three
Coloradans report being concerned about the costs of food
since the coronavirus pandemic hit. Passed in May, the grant
program now connects emergency food providers around
the state with Colorado-grown fruits, vegetables, dairy, and
meat products from local farms. For many of Colorado’s small
farmers, this program is an opportunity to shore up their
business following coronavirus-related revenue losses.
The Bill’s seed was planted when Hunger Free Colorado
surveyed food pantry clients on the impact of the
coronavirus. Eighty-three percent of pantry clients wanted
more produce, meat, and dairy products during their visits.
Jason Harrison, food pantry network manager,
recalled, “We worked with our pantry partners and
members of the Joint Budget Committee (JBC) to create
a program that would provide pantry clients with those
critical resources while simultaneously supporting our
local agriculture communities.”
Through the CARES Act, Colorado received almost $1.7
billion in federal coronavirus aid, signed into law on March
27. Over half of this money was directed to education, but
the Colorado Proud and Food Pantries Act, HB20-1422,
was awarded $500k in May from this CARES Act money.
Governor Polis issued an executive order on October 9,
allocating another $100k.
׉	 7cassandra://d6iUfbV9TVmcKdO4O1N3fVVSu7vZmcrfaNGZeE1tA30,` _jL5׉E>COMMUNITY PROFILE
FOOD PANTRIES ON THE FRONT LINES OF THE PANDEMIC
BY PAULA BARD
IN THE MOUNTAINS of Jefferson County, tucked up
behind what long-time area residents call the “old
Safeway” (as distinguished from the “new Safeway”
across the highway), sits a large, rambling building
called the Mountain Resource Center of Conifer. Just
off of Highway 285, it offers an abundance of services
to mountain folks, covering anything from emergency
financial assistance to boxes of food. They even offer
cooking classes. The pantry also offers support services
to veterans, and parents can enroll their children in the
Resource Center’s early childhood classes. Community
advocates hand out tents and sleeping bags. Supporters
can purchase hand-made bowls at the yearly fundraiser.
Between March and June, Food Pantry Coordinator,
Ingrid Wilson saw a 145 percent increase in food needs
over what they distributed in 2019. They currently serve
250-400 families a month, 50 food boxes a day, Monday
through Thursday.
“It’s a drive-through right now, and we will have to
adjust in the winter,” Wilson explained. Winter hits
hard in Conifer; their drive-through setup will indeed
become treacherous, if not impossible.
Wilson sends a driver down to Food Bank of the
Rockies every Monday to Thursday.
“We pick up boxes of food and supplies. We get a
bunch of dry goods and a bunch of fresh goods. It ebbs
and flows,” said Wilson. “We try for fresh goods, but it
just depends on what they’ve got. We pick up anything
else that looks good — like we got corn on the cob for
people. Last week, we got deodorant and diapers, baby
supplies, toilet paper, toothpaste.”
The mountain community contributes to this effort
generously. As Wilson explained, “For grocery rescue
up here in Conifer, we go to Starbucks, Safeway, Natural
Grocers, King Soopers, and the Kum and Go. Last year,
we rescued nearly 20,000 pounds of food.”
The food pantry has two full-time staff members,
Wilson and Shellie Logan McKeown, who organize
this extensive, bustling, and efficient food transfer.
Regular volunteers drive the food up from Denver.
One or two extra volunteers come in each day to
help fill boxes, organize the food, and hand it out to
community members.
A recipient of the Food Pantries Act grant, the Conifer
Food Pantry brings much-needed food to hungry
families, as well as some mountain folks who now live
in their cars and even tents. This effort aims to keep the
Conifer community fed. ■
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
Colorado Food Pantries report an increase of two to six
times their previous client numbers.
In April, Healthier Colorado conducted a survey on the
impact of the coronavirus, which painted a disturbing picture
for many Coloradans. According to their findings, 47 percent
of respondents said they or someone in their household
had lost their job, lost income, or had hours reduced due to
the coronavirus. People taking the brunt of this economic
contraction include younger people 18-29 (64 percent lost
job/income), people who rent (57 percent), those who
work outside the home (57 percent), those on Medicaid
(61 percent), households living on $30K income or less (53
percent), and homes with an individual 18 years or younger
(54 percent).
Cutter understood the urgent necessity for the Food
Pantry Bill in this dire economic environment.
“Hunger is something that I have always cared about. It has
been important to me. It has been a problem for a long time,”
Cutter said.
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
Hunger fits into a broader vision for Cutter. “I’m really
interested in the
juxtaposition of hunger, food waste,
climate change, soil health, and composting. All of these
come together. Climate change is going to make it harder
to feed people. Regenerative agriculture, good soil health
– that’s what’s going to help folks. We have to look for
solutions that address this on a number of levels and create
systemic change.”
Cutter believes the Food Pantry Bill is a start. If she wins
a second term during the November election, she will
continue focusing on these issues. ■
November 2020 DENVER VOICE 7
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FROM LEFT SHUNDEEN WILLIAMS, MARIE WILLIAMS, KEVIN FURCAP AND GLORIA ERIACHO REST IN THE SHADE AFTER COOKING DINNER.
ALL FOUR HAD COME BACK TO CARE FOR THEIR MOTHER AND GRANDMOTHER. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
SURVIVING COVID ON THE
NAVAJO RESERVATION
BY GILES CLASEN
HAULING WATER
Every day Franklin Martin walks to the Chevy truck he
inherited from his cousin, who died too young in an alcoholrelated
driving accident.
Martin’s life has been marked by the loss of loved ones long
before COVID-19 came to the Navajo Reservation. Today,
however, that loss feels closer than years past because the
spread of the coronavirus has hit his people uniquely hard.
Martin could replace the truck; it is well over 20 years old
and has the miles to match. Still, Martin likes the connection
to his past, even the tragedy. He doesn’t want to forget the
people he has lost.
These days Martin uses the truck to transport water and
other supplies to individuals in need on the Bodaway-Gap
chapter of the Navajo Reservation.
He and his daughter, Alicia Martin, started hauling
water and other supplies to individuals living on the Navajo
Reservation in March of this year.
To live in the Arizona desert without running water
requires each family to haul water to their home. Often,
Navajo families live on less than 100 gallons of water a week to
cook, clean, and drink.
The average individual in the United States uses close to
100 gallons of water in a day, but the Navajo Nation has had
a precarious relationship with water for years. The Arizona
desert is very dry, and the bedrock is difficult to break
through. Even if you could dig deep enough to reach water,
the uranium mining of past decades has made much of the
ground water unsafe for human consumption.
THE VIRUS STRIKES
Day to day life was difficult enough, then COVID-19 hit. In
the early days of COVID, the Navajo Nation had some of the
highest case rates for the virus in the United States. The Federal
Government did little to help. The situation got so bad that
Doctors Without Borders stepped in to help control the spread.
The guidelines to stay safe were simple. Wash your hands,
wear a mask, and social distance.
When water is scarce, it is difficult to follow the guidelines.
It is difficult to clean and wash your hands with such little
water. It is difficult to social distance when you need to drive
into a city center frequently to get more water.
Arizona does not have a statewide mask mandate, and
outside the reservation, mask usage is somewhat scarce in the
smaller cities.
As of October 14, there have been 10,780 confirmed cases
on the Reservation. That is nearly one case per 30 people.
Simply put, the Navajo Nation is not in a strong position to
fight COVID-19 without help.
THINKING BIGGER
At a local level, individuals like Alicia and Franklin also
sought to help.
“We started collecting supplies and delivering them as
soon as we could,” Alicia said. “It’s not right to say, ‘No’ when
someone needs help, and people are dying right now. Our
people need help.”
The work started slowly, as the two learned how to organize a
relief team. With permission from the restaurant where she was
working, Alicia took water to give to families. Her restaurant had
been shuttered due to the virus, and she had been furloughed.
She began thinking bigger. In April, Alicia started a
GoFundMe campaign and raised $10,000. She brought in
help to manage the money and ensure the donations went to
supplies for her people.
Things were moving rapidly. Then, Franklin was diagnosed
with the virus. He spent two weeks in the hospital recovering.
By the time the two got back to delivering water and supplies,
three family members, Franklin’s aunt, uncle, and cousin, had
died from COVID-19.
DELIVERING SUPPLIES
As the battle with the virus took a personal toll on the Martins,
they continued delivering supplies.
Cheryl Osorio and her family live in a house that is not
connected to the power grid and has no running water.
Osorio uses a generator to power her house when needed. She
uses her wood stove to cook and purify her water.
Osorio and her family hadn’t been willing to drive into
Page, Ariz. The city didn’t enact a mask mandate until June 24,
and the trip to the tourist town seemed too risky.
Osorio is grateful to the Martins for the supply runs, but
living conditions on the Reservation remain difficult. “I want
to move out of here,” Osorio said. “I feel like we’re forgotten
with everybody else getting help. This has been going on a
long time. Just with COVID, it’s different now. It is scarier.”
The Martins eventually started receiving help from other
sources. Compassionate Colorado delivered four trailers of
food, water, and cleaning supplies to the Martins in June.
(See “Compassionate Colorado Lives up to Its Name” in the
Denver VOICE July 2020 issue.)
8 DENVER VOICE November 2020
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KENDRICK WEEKS CARRIES HIS SON ARIES WHILE PUTTING DONATED SUPPLIES INTO HIS TRUCK. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
The Martins insisted every can of food, diaper, and water
bottle be cleaned with bleach before going into storage. They
couldn’t risk carrying the coronavirus onto the Reservation.
The items in highest demand have been hand sanitizer and
Clorox wipes. “They are like gold,’ Alicia said.
FROM BAD TO WORSE
The problems for the Navajo people started long before COVID.
A land dispute between the Navajo and Hopi tribes led to
a freeze of all development and construction on the Navajo
Reservation. The Bennet Freeze, as it was known, was
intended to encourage negotiations between the two tribes.
Instead, it prevented individuals from legally repairing or
replacing their homes.
The Freeze lasted over 40 years, until the Obama
administration removed it in 2009. But the ramifications
continue to impact individuals.
Joyce Dale lives in a home that has no working plumbing.
The foundation became damaged during the freeze and went
unrepaired for years. Dale qualified for a subsidy to help with
her housing, but her home was deemed damaged beyond repair,
so she is not permitted to use the subsidy to repair the home.
“I’m fighting to keep mice and other wild things out,” Dale
said. “I’m so ashamed of my house, how it looks. I wish I lived
in a better home in a place with water. I wish we could repair
what we have.”
The house has been re-sided with plywood over the
years, and she has a bathroom that stores boxes because the
plumbing doesn’t work.
She and her husband repeatedly apply hand sanitizer and
are isolating themselves to avoid COVID. She fears that if she
were to get COVID-19 she would not make it through. She is
medically vulnerable due to having had a stroke.
DOING WHAT THEY CAN
“People don’t understand what we are going through on the
Reservation,” Alicia said. “We were forgotten long before
COVID, and now we are struggling more because of years of
being abandoned.”
The Martins are doing what they can to help people during
COVID but are already thinking about what they can do for
their people once COVID-19 is no longer a threat.
They have set up a nonprofit — Families to Families
Ajooba’ Hasin — and are close to raising another $100,000
on GoFundMe.
Franklin is running for president of his Navajo Chapter.
He and Alicia have been talking weekly with their nonprofit
board to organize deliveries and seek needed supplies. They
work six days a week, often 12 or more hours a day.
The Martins are hopeful that their work can help their
people today and create more opportunity for their people in
the future.
They have no plans to stop. ■
To donate to or learn more about the
Families to Families Ajooba’ Hasin COVID Relief Fund,
visit https://www.gofundme.com/f/clean-water-for-navajo
CHERYL OSORIO TELLS HER SON JESUS TO TURN THE LIGHTS OFF TO HER HOME. OSORIO AND HER FAMILY LIVE IN A HOUSE WITH NO RUNNING WATER AND NOT CONNECTED TO THE
POWER GRID. OSORIO USES A GENERATOR TO POWER HER HOUSE WHEN NEEDED. SHE USES HER WOOD STOVE TO COOK AND PURIFY HER WATER. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
November 2020 DENVER VOICE 9
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RESTORING VOTING RIGHTS TO EX-FELONS IN
FLORIDA : AN INTERVIEW WITH SARAH PARADY
BY GILES CLASEN
SARAH PARADY IS A FORMER LAWYER and current partner of
Parady Lebsack Law Firm, which specializes in employment
law and civil liberties.
Parady was the president of the Colorado Women’s
Bar Association in 2019-2020 and was recognized as the
2017 New Trial Lawyer of the Year by the Colorado Trial
Lawyers Association.
But when she first became a mother a couple of years
ago, Parady found it difficult to balance her professional
responsibilities with mothering responsibilities. She said the
weight she felt for her clients was almost overwhelming.
She often served individuals with mental health issues in
employment cases and fought for their rights. When she first
started having panic attacks, she didn’t recognize that she was
the one who needed mental health care.
Parady went to her partners in early 2020 to let them know
she was struggling. The next day, the firm reassigned her cases
to help her recover.
Parady has been taking a break from the law since then
but has not stopped living her values. She began working as a
volunteer with Resistance Labs and has sent more than 8,000
texts to individuals in support of community outreach on
progressive campaigns.
Parady said she recognizes that not all individuals are as
fortunate as she has been. Not all are able to take leave of their
careers when it interferes with their health.
She also believes this needs to change so all people can
meet their needs and their families’ needs no matter the
circumstances. She believes employees’ rights and the
American Safety Net program need to be strengthened.
The following interview with her has been edited for length
and clarity.
“LEADING UP TO THE ELECTION, I tried to test drive different ways
to help with different get-out-the-vote campaigns. I wanted
to do anything to bolster our democracy into the run-up to
this election. I eventually signed up for an organization called
Resistance Labs that
CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
voting access. The goal is to return to felons the rights that the
voters intended.
There’s a court decision upholding the law that the legislature
passed; it’s just that the courts have punted on and essentially
have refused to consider it on an emergency basis, all the way
up to the Supreme Court.
And so, getting involved in as far of the opposite end as
runs text campaigns for all kinds of
mostly smaller, progressive nonprofits and campaigns around
the country.
They do local elections, they do different kinds of get-outthe-vote
programs, and a lot of stuff with the 2020 Census.
One of the campaigns this year was for the Florida Rights
Restoration Coalition (FRRC).
What they had us do was to send out massive numbers of
text messages to people in Florida asking if they or anyone
they knew needed to pay off legal fines to be able to vote.
Florida succeeded at the campaign [to give ex-felons back
their voting rights], and then immediately after that, the state
legislature turned around and passed a law that said that,
essentially, in contravention of what the state’s residents had
voted on, former felons could not vote unless they had paid off
all of their fines and fees from the criminal justice system.
These fines can be thousands and thousands of dollars. And
that might include restitution to victims, but it can include
other things, as well.
So, the FRRC campaign involved raising money to help
people pay off those fines so that they could get back their
10 DENVER VOICE November 2020
you imagine: sending texts to people and saying, ‘Hey, do you
need help with your fines and fees so you can vote?’ was just
satisfying on a level that I can’t even begin to explain.
It was like, ‘Forget the Supreme Court, we can fix this sort of
democratically,’ and I would get quite a few responses.
Throughout the campaign, I texted thousands of people, and
I’m sure I got at least 50 or 60 that said they needed fines or fees
paid off or knew someone who did. One of the beautiful things
about that is that it’s not just that you’re going to get your voting
rights back.
Any kind of debt is probably impacting people’s ability to get
housing, lines of credit, all those things. Assisting people’s reentry
to society is a fantastic anti-poverty measure, as well.
The instructions we received were detailed. For example,
we might be told ‘If you’re viewing [specific information] on
your phone screen, you may need to shrink the window to see
Question Four, and that may be why you’re getting that error.’
We walked people through the steps, helping them get their
applications in. We made sure to follow up and help people
get to the polls.
That’s as direct a relationship to helping people access their
constitutional rights as I’ve ever had, and it was a lot of fun.”
In some ways Parady felt this campaign work was more
impactful than the work she did to restore rights to individuals
in the courtroom.
“One thing that is a little bit frustrating for an attorney is
the ratio, the limited number of clients we’re allowed to take
on. There are two different outcomes that a case can have.
Obviously, the number one concern is helping the client right
the wrong that happened to them, but another possibility is
that you might make a good case law for another case, and that
happens from time to time.
For example, I had a case once that was a wage theft class
action. We got the first ruling in the District of Colorado
saying that two different entities, whether employer or temp/
staffing agency, could be jointly liable for unpaid wages. This is
important in this economy because you frequently have things
like staffing agencies, temp agencies, franchising, or what
people call fissuring of the workplace.
The Colorado wage laws provide that if you are acting as
someone’s employer, then you and whomever you shifted that
job off to on paper should be jointly liable for the terminated
employee’s wages. That case made it so you can’t contract away
your obligations as an employer.
A decision like that is helpful and important and is kind of
motivating in a different way. But when it came to representing
individual clients, I worried about them and tried to stick with
them through the big slug of litigation to eventually get them a
good outcome. It took a lot of their time, a lot of my time.
It was very emotionally difficult to get there for a lot of
my clients, to spend all this time in this very uncertain state
where you’re waiting to see if you’re going to get compensated.
You have financial worries, and you’re having to tell the story
of what happened to you over and over again, the system is
super complex.
Those outcomes often, at the end of the day, were very, very
good. We’re frequently able to recover a lot of money for some
of our clients, but it’s not immediate. And it’s a whole lot of
effort for both the attorney and the client to get there. So, it’s
pretty different [from the volunteer work with the FRRC], I
would say.
In Colorado, we don’t have felon disenfranchisement, which
is a wonderful thing. Several states still do. There’s been a
movement for decades now to try to change that.
The thought is that you’ve paid your debt to society and
you’ve seen a part of society that a lot of us haven’t seen, frankly.
Most Americans have never even been inside a prison or jail or
had a relationship with someone who was.
[Being inside a prison] really does change your view of
what the government does and how the government should
use its power.
Those are people who I want to see voting because they’ve
experienced both the criminal justice system, the courts, the
legal system, maybe the public defender system, and then
incarceration in a way that many people have not.
They have a very relevant and important voice. More
fundamentally than that, they’re citizens of this country,
and once they’ve done their time and been released, I see
no reason why we should continue to keep them out of our
political processes.” ■
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WRITING THROUGH HARD TIMES
Each month, the Denver VOICE publishes a selection of writing from workshops sponsored by Lighthouse Writers Workshop.
The Hard Times Writing Workshop is a collaboration between Denver Public Library and Lighthouse Writers
Workshop. This workshop is open to all members of the public—especially those experiencing homelessness.
Contact the Lighthouse Writers Workshop for details about virtual Hard Times writing workshops:
lighthousewriters.org/workshop/denver-public-library-hard-times
The Lighthouse sponsored workshop at The Gathering Place is specifically for that organization’s clients.
To check out more writing by the poets featured in this column, go to writedenver.org.
JANIS OLSEN
THE KEY
SHALEEN VANESE FIGUEROA
CHARLOTTE & WILBUR
I still have her keys
Singing in all the betweens
The key to her heart.
Such the tangled web we weave,
When first we conspire to deceive.
Direly at a loss, we diligently strive, to indeed achieve,
To retain a win we had once thought,
We would never ever receive.
BENJAMIN ERIC NELSON
WEPT
Leaves are placed upon his dead body
His eyelids pulled down for respect
Ambulance is coming... Oddly
To scoop him up he is blessed
Order of name
Scrub belief
Scrub insane
To lose my mind was a release
It helps sometimes
Force of habit
Spell unwinds
Alure is tragic
Honor kept
Seeing another one has wept
Hurry up and wait.
That’s how we play the game.
Each day in and each one out,
Seems to just never cease to amaze.
Just never winning for losing,
Is just LIFE, very simple, and cruising,
Praying that one day there will be a win for all that losing,
And maybe we can triumph over all those hardships, we tend to just daily grieve.
...To be continued.
PRESENTED BY:
November 2020 DENVER VOICE 11
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9ׁH #http://facebook.com/RastaSalsaDanceׁׁЈנ_݆jL5 ̎
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12 DENVER VOICE November 2020
Y0066_190904_083721_M
20CST20874_H0624-001-000
׉	 7cassandra://NFpV4AnLSoXgY1wyterO0Vn2-O8VxGKPyWh4btaX35I` _jL5׉EEVENTS
WHEN: Nov 2, 4:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
COST: Free entry
WHERE: Stanley Marketplace – 2501 Dallas St.
MORE INFO: facebook.com/OhHeyStanley
MLK/FBI AT THE DENVER FILM FESTIVAL
MLK/FBI is the first film to uncover the extent of the FBI’s surveillance and
harassment of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Based on newly discovered and
declassified files and utilizing a trove of documents obtained through the Freedom
of Information Act and unsealed by the National Archives, this documentary
explores the government’s history of targeting Black activists and leaders
and the contested meaning behind some of our most cherished ideals.
WHEN: Nov 7
COST: $18
MORE INFO: Online at denverfilm.org/dff43
VIRTUAL TOUR OF THE UNIVERSE
No spaceship? No problem. Learn about our place in the universe, how we fit into
the solar system, and the ways we are integrally connected to space, all from the
comfort of your own living room. Content is geared towards the entire family.
WHEN: Nov 11, 6:30 p.m.
COST: $8
MORE INFO: Online at facebook.com/DMNSorg
OPENING DAY OF THE DENVER CHRISTKINDL MARKET
This festive holiday tradition moves to Civic Center Park this year, allowing
for more social distancing between guests. However, much of the charm will
remain with festive music, big beers, Gluhwein, traditional cuisine, craft
vendors, and heat lamps scattered throughout the park. Market runs through
December 23, 2020; check the website for daily hours and entertainment.
WHEN: Nov 20, 11 a.m. – 9 p.m.
COST: Free entry
WHERE: Civic Center Park – Colfax & Broadway
MORE INFO: christkindlmarketdenver.com
AFRO-CUBAN DANCING IN THE PARK
Although the world of Afro-Cuban dance is vast, the instructor will
focus on a few concepts for each class, explaining each movement
and the connection of the dance to the music and history. All are
welcome, this class takes place outdoors. Masks are required.
WHEN: Nov 29, 11 a.m. – 1 p.m.
COST: Free
WHERE: Cheeseman Park – 1599 E. 8th Ave.
MORE INFO: facebook.com/RastaSalsaDance
November 2020 DENVER VOICE 13
ACROSS
1. “Aladdin” prince
4. 2006 Pixar film
8. Said something
13. (In) harmony
15. Sandler of “Big Daddy”
16. Reacted to fireworks
17. Jewish month
18. ___ good example
19. “___ Green Tomatoes”
20. Keystone XL and
Dakota Access, for two
22. Muscle weakness
23. Had a homecooked
meal
24. Emmy-winning Lewis
26. TV teaser
28. Croquet hoop
32. Beach, in Barcelona
35. Alternative to a fade
37. Reverse
38. Campus military org.
39. Dizzy
40. Opera house box
41. Aroma
42. Counter call
43. Wait with ___ breath
44. Take off
46. Fragrant wood
48. Consider, as options
50. Who’s who
53. Islamic teacher (Var.)
56. Withdrawing clerical
status from
59. Be of use
60. “I’m ___ your tricks!”
61. Edible taro root
62. Change, as a clock
63. Ancient
64. Slap on, as paint
65. Flip, in a way
66. Viral sensation
67. Floral necklace
DOWN
1. PDQ
2. One of the sisters in
“Pride and Prejudice”
3. Not suitable
4. Slot spot
5. Gulf of ___, off the
coast of Yemen
6. Numbers needed when
converting currencies
7. Huge hit
8. Wildlife ___, animal park
in Winston, Oregon
9. Specified
10. Buckeye State
11. Astute
12. Small whirlpool
14. Bugs
21. Turkish money
25. Missing from the
Marines, say
27. Filly’s mother
29. Granny ___
30. Halftime lead, e.g.
31. Pigeon-___
32. Egg on
33. Mother ___
34. Above
36. Network of nerves
39. Debate side
43. Island near Java
45. Property
47. Crack
49. Twilight, old-style
51. Kind of wave
52. Provide (with)
53. Neighbor of Earth
54. Eye layer
55. Glasgow gal
57. Tabloid twosome
58. Mongolian desert
COURTESY OF DEAR DENVER
DEARDENVER.NET
PUZZLES
Thanks to Deborah Lastowka, with Dear Denver.net, for coming up with some great
ideas for entertainment people can enjoy while practicing social distancing.
DAY OF THE DEAD FAMILY CELEBRATION
Come experience this unique tradition at this family-friendly event, featuring
music, dancing, a pumpkin patch, and beautiful altars throughout the
building. Masks will be required inside and outside of the Marketplace.
COURTESY OF STREETROOTS
ANSWERS ARE ON PAGE 15
PUZZLE COURTESY OF STREET ROOTS, DENVER VOICE’S SISTER PAPER IN PORTLAND, OR
PUZZLE COURTESY OF STREET ROOTS, DENVER VOICE’S SISTER PAPER IN PORTLAND, OR
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DONOR LIST
WE LOVE OUR DONORS! WHEN YOU SUPPORT
THE DENVER VOICE, YOU ARE HELPING SUPPORT
HUNDREDS OF HOMELESS AND IMPOVERISHED
INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE WORKING TO REALIZE
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$5,000 - $9,999
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$1,000-$4,999
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Network for Good
Matthew Seashore & Nikki Lawson
Arc Thrift Stores
Jeremy Anderson
City Side Remodeling
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Signs by Timorrow
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Wynkoop Brewery
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Kauer Construction & Design
Gaetanos Restaurant
Patrick & Jan Rutty
Conover/Wonder Family Fund
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$500-$999
Comedy Works
Michelle Stapleton & James Thompson
Michael Dino
Christine Muldoon and Pete Iannuzzi
Jill Haug
Caring Connection
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Kroger Grocery
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Lighthouse Writer’s Workshop, Inc.
Keyrenter Property Management Denver
Gaspar Terrana
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Elizabeth A. Mitchell
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Zephyr Wilkins
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ACM LLP
Cuneo Law Firm
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Jim and Nancy Thomas
Peggy Mihelich
Susan B. Jones
14 DENVER VOICE November 2020
SPONSORSHIP LEVELS
THE DENVER VOICE’S ANNUAL SPONSORSHIP SUPPORT LEVELS PROVIDE BUSINESSES LIKE YOURS THE OPPORTUNITY TO
INVEST IN WORK EMPOWERMENT, HOMELESS PREVENTION, THE CHALLENGING OF COMMUNITY PERCEPTIONS, AND TO
BE A PART OF PROVIDING OUR COMMUNITY WITH QUALITY AWARD-WINNING JOURNALISM THAT MAKES A DIFFERENCE
THROUGH OUR WRITERS AND VENDORS – AN INVALUABLE PART OF DENVER’S COMMUNITY.
YOUR INVOLVEMENT WILL HELP HIGHLIGHT THE IMPORTANCE OF TAKING POSITIVE ACTION TO COMBAT HOMELESSNESS
AND IMPOVERISHMENT. AS A SPONSOR, YOU HAVE A WAY TO REACH OUT TO THE COMMUNITY AND GIVE SOMETHING BACK
AT THE SAME TIME.
ANNUAL SPONSORSHIPS BENEFITS INCLUDE YOUR LOGO LISTED ON OUR WEBSITE HOMEPAGE, MONTHLY AD SPACE IN
OUR PAPER, AND SPECIAL EVENT PERKS FOR YOU AND YOUR EMPLOYEES ALL YEAR LONG. IT’S A GOOD DEAL FOR A GOOD
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• One complimentary full page ad in the newspaper ($1,000 value)
• Table of 10 and Sponsor recognition at annual Rise and Thrive Breakfast (200 attendees)
• Sponsorship recognition at our annual Pints Fighting Poverty event (200 attendees)
• Business logo highlighted on website homepage, and in the Above the Fold Sponsorship list
• Logo highlighted in our annual report, along with logo in quarterly support feature of the paper
GALLEY: $2,500
• One complimentary half page add in the newspaper ($600 value)
• Table of 10 and Sponsor recognition at annual Rise and Thrive Breakfast (200 attendees)
• Sponsorship recognition at our annual Pints Fighting Poverty event (200 attendees)
• Business logo highlighted on website homepage, and in the Galley Sponsorship list
• Logo highlighted in our annual report, along with logo in quarterly support feature of the paper
HONOR BOX: $1,000
• Table of 10 and Sponsor recognition at annual Rise and Thrive Breakfast (200 attendees)
• Sponsorship recognition at our annual Pints Fighting Poverty event (200 attendees)
• Business logo highlighted on website homepage, and in the Honor Box Sponsorship list
• Logo highlighted in our annual report, along with logo in quarterly support feature of the paper
FLY SHEET: $500
• Two complimentary tickets to our annual Pints Fighting Poverty event ($50 value)
• Business logo highlighted on website homepage, and in the Fly Sheet Sponsorship list
• Logo highlighted in our annual report, along with logo in quarterly support feature of the paper
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RESOURCE LIST
FOR HOMELESS INDIVIDUALS IN DENVER
DENVERVOICE.ORG/RESOURCE-LIST
DIAL 211 FOR A MORE COMPLETE LIST OF RESOURCES IN ENGLISH AND SPANISH. PROVIDES INFORMATION FOR FOOD, MEDICAL CARE, SENIOR SERVICES, YOUTH PROGRAMS,
COUNSELING, EDUCATION, SHELTERS, SUBSTANCE ABUSE, HOLIDAY ASSISTANCE, AND MORE. EMAIL EDITOR@DENVERVOICE.ORG WITH CORRECTIONS OR ADDITIONS.
FREE MEALS
AGAPE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 2501 California St., Sat., 11am
CAPITOL HEIGHTS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1100 Fillmore St., Sat. lunch at 11:30am capitolheightspresbyterian.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES Go to mealsforpoor.org for meal locations
CATHEDRAL OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION 1530 Logan St.; sandwiches & coffee Mon.-Fri. 8:30am
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. christsbody.org
CHRIST IN THE CITY Home-cooked meal; Civic Center Park at Colfax & Lincoln at 1pm every Wed. & 2nd Sat.
christinthecity.org
CITYSQUARE DENVER 303-783-3777, 2575 S. Broadway; Food pantry Tues. 10am-6pm citysquare.org
DENVER INNER CITY PARISH 303-322-5733, 1212 Mariposa St., VOA Dining Center for Seniors, free 60 yrs and
older, Wed.-Sat. 9am-12pm. Food Bank, Wed.-Fri., tickets at 9am, food bank open 10am-12pm. dicp.org
DENVER RESCUE MISSION 1130 Park Avenue West, 3 meals 7 days/week: 5:30am, 12pm, 6pm 303-294-0157
denverrescuemission.org
FATHER WOODY’S HAVEN OF HOPE 1101 W. 7th Ave. 303-607-0855. Mon.-Fri. 7am-1pm. Not open weekends.
Breakfast is at 8am, and lunch is served at 11am frwoodyshavenofhope.org
FEEDING DENVER’S HUNGRY Food service on the second and fourth Thurs. of each month; locations found at
feedingdenvershungry.org/events.html
FOOD NOT BOMBS Wed. 4pm/Civic Center Park facebook.com/ThePeoplesPicnic
HARE KRISHNA TEMPLE 1400 Cherry St., free vegetarian feast on Sun., 6:45-7:30pm krishnadenver.com
HIS LOVE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH 910 Kalamath, community dinner on Thurs., 6-6:45pm, men’s breakfast 1st Sat.
of the Month, 8-10am, women’s breakfast 2nd Sat., 9-11am. hislovefellowship.org
HOLY GHOST CATHOLIC CHURCH 1900 California St., sandwiches, Mon.-Sat., 10-10:30am holyghostchurch.org
JORDAN AME CHURCH 29th and Milwaukee St., Tues. lunch 11:30am-1:00pm jordanamedenver.churchfoyer.com
OPEN DOOR MINISTRIES 1567 Marion St., Sat. morning breakfast: 8am, Sun. dinner (required church
attendance at 4:30pm) meal served at 6pm. 303-830-2201 odmdenver.org/home
ST. ELIZABETH’S Speer Blvd. & Arapahoe St. on Auraria campus, 7 days/week, 11:00am; food, coffee.
stelizabethdenver.org
ST. FRANCIS CENTER 2323 Curtis St., Wed. & Fri. 3-4:30pm (except third Wed. of each month). sfcdenver.org
ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN 1600 Grant St., Street Reach meal Mon. 1-4:30pm. Grocery room open at 11:30am every
Mon. saintpauldenver.com
ST. PETER AND ST. MARY 126 W. Second Ave., dinner at 6 on Tues. 303-722-8781 stpeterandmary.org
SAME CAFÉ 2023 E. Colfax Ave. 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, 720-530-6853
soallmayeat.org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES 846 E. 18th Ave. 3 meals, Mon.-Fri. 7am-7pm; Sun. 11am-4pm. 55+
seniorsupportservices.org/programs
TRINITY UNITED METHODIST 1820 Broadway, meals served Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 11:45-12:15 trinityumc.org
URBAN OUTREACH DENVER 608 26th St., Thurs. dinners, 6pm-7pm lovedenver.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.
voacolorado.org/gethelp-denvermetro-foodnutrition-themission
CAREER SERVICES
COMMUNITY TECHNOLOGY CENTER Level 4, Denver Central Library, 14th Ave. & Broadway. 720-865-1706.
Hours: Mon. & Tues. 10am-8pm; Wed., Thurs., Fri. 10am-6pm; Sat. 9am-5pm & Sun. 1-5pm; FREE services
include computer/internet use, wifi, computer classes, job search/resume classes and one-on-one tech help
appointments. denverlibrary.org/ctc
THE WESTSIDE ONE-STOP CAREER CENTER Denver Department of Human Services, 1200 Federal Blvd., Mon.Fri.,
7:30am-4:30pm; Services include: employment counseling, assisted job search, résumé preparation,
job/applicant matching, phone bank for calling employers, access to computers, copiers, fax, etc.
careercenteroffices.com/center/231/denver-westside-workforce-center
MEDICAL & DENTAL SERVICES
ACS COMMUNITY L.I.F.T. CareVan at Open Door Ministries, 1567 Marion St., Tues. 9am-12:30pm
DENVER HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER 303-436-6000, 777 Bannock St. denverhealth.org
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER 303-572-7800; 112 E. 8th Ave.; Mon.-Fri., 9am-12pm. HIV/Hep C/
Gonorrhea/ Chlamydia testing available. Our services are restricted to active IV Drug Users. Offers clean
syringes to active users, as well as safety training on how to properly dispose of dirty syringes.
harmreductionactioncenter.org
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, info@hepc-connection.org, liverhealthconnection.org
INNER CITY HEALTH CENTER 303-296-1767, 3800 York St. Mon., Wed.-Fri. 8am-5pm; Tues. 9am-5pm;
Sat. 8am-2pm. Emergency walk-ins.
SALUD CLINIC 6075 Parkway Drive, Ste. 160, Commerce City; Dental 303-286-6755. Medical 303-286-8900.
Medical Hours: Mon.-Wed. 8am-9pm, Thurs.-Fri. 8am-5pm; Sat. (Urgent Care only) 8am-5pm;
Dental Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8am-5pm; Pharmacy Hours: Mon.-Fri. 1-5pm; After Office Hours: 1-800-283-3221
saludclinic.org/commerce-city
STOUT STREET CLINIC 303-293-2220, 2130 Stout St. Clinic hours for new and established patients: 7am-4pm
Mon., Tues., Thurs., & Fri. The clinic is open Wed. 11am-7pm. coloradocoalition.org/healthcare
VA MEDICAL CENTER 303-399-8020, 1055 Clermont St. va.gov/find-locations/facility/vha_554A5
WORKNOW 720-389-0999; job recruitment, skills training, and job placement work-now.org
DROP-IN & DAYTIME CENTERS
ATTENTION HOMES 303-447-1207; 3080 Broadway, Boulder; contactah@attentionhomes.org. Offers safe shelter,
supportive programming, and other services to youth up to age 24 attentionhomes.org
CITYSQUARE DENVER 303-783-3777; 2575 S. Broadway; Mon.-Thurs. 10am-2pm, Denver Works helps with
employment, IDs, birth certs; mail services and lockers citysquare.org
FATHER WOODY’S HAVEN OF HOPE 303-607-0855; 1101 W. 7th Ave.; Mon.-Fri. 7am-1pm. Six private showers &
bathrooms, laundry, lunch & more thoh.org
THE GATHERING PLACE 303-321-4198; 1535 High St.; 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, and more. tgpdenver.org
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER 303-572-7800, 231 East Colfax; Mon.-Fri. 9am-12pm. Provides clean
syringes, syringe disposal, harm-reduction counseling, safe materials, Hep C/HIV education, and health
education classes. harmreductionactioncenter.org
HOLY GHOST CATHOLIC CHURCH 1900 California St., help with lost IDs and birth certificates holyghostchurch.org
HOPE PROGRAM 303-832-3354, 1555 Race St.; Mon.-Fri. 8am-4pm. For men and women with HIV.
LAWRENCE STREET COMMUNITY CENTER 2222 Lawrence St.; 303-294-0157; day facility, laundry, showers,
restrooms, access to services homelessassistance.us/li/lawrence-street-community-center
OPEN DOOR MINISTRIES 1567 Marion St.; Mon.-Fri. 7am-5:30pm. Drop-in center: bathrooms, coffee/tea,
snacks, resources, WIFI odmdenver.org
ST. FRANCIS CENTER 303-297-1576; 2323 Curtis St. 6am-6pm daily. Storage for one bag (when space is
available). Satellite Clinic hours- Mon., Tues., Thurs, Fri. 7:30am-3:30pm; Wed. 12:30-4:30pm sfcdenver.org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES 846 E. 18th Ave. For those 55 and older. TV room, bus tokens, mental/physical
health outreach, and more. 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. soxplace.com
THE SPOT AT URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES) 2100 Stout St. 303-291-0442. Drop-in hours Mon.-Fri. 8-11am. If
you are a youth aged 15-20 in need of immediate overnight shelter services, please contact 303-974-2928
urbanpeak.org/denver/programs-and-services/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 urbanpeak.org
November 2020 DENVER VOICE 15
DON’T LOOK NOW!
PUZZLES ARE ON PAGE 13
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9ׁH +http://DENVERVOICE.ORG/PINTSFIGHTINGPOVERTYׁׁЈ׉ENOVEMBER 19, 2020
THURSDAY, 6-7:30 P.M.
The Denver VOICE’s second annual Pints Fighting Poverty Pub Crawl on November 19, 2020 is an incredible
opportunity to show support for those in our community experiencing homelessness and/or poverty,
gain insight into the realities, and make an impact by helping us raise the funds to continue to provide
economic, education, and empowerment opportunities for those we have the privilege of serving!
Happening during National Hunger and Homelessness Awareness Week, the evening kicks off VIRTUALLY
this year with a special online guest speaker and a series of featured vendors - includes four virtual stops
and a host of exclusive drink selections at some of Denver’s premier brewery and spirit locations! You can
register as an individual, couple, or host a small group in your home with special group pricing packages.
100 percent of proceeds raised go toward our mission to facilitate a dialogue addressing the roots of
homelessness by telling stories of people whose lives are impacted by poverty and homelessness and to offer
economic, educational, and empowerment opportunities for the impoverished community during a time when need
is at an all time high and the challenges of the pandemic mean your support is more important than ever before.
TICKETS: DENVERVOICE.ORG/PINTSFIGHTINGPOVERTY
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