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2
SUGGESTED
DONATION
@DenverVOICE
VEHICLE
DWELLING
IN RURAL
COLORADO
HUNDREDS ARE ESTIMATED TO
BE SHELTERING IN VEHICLES IN
THE DENVER METRO AREA PAGE 8
CLOWNING
IS SERIOUS
BUSINESS
PSYCHIATRIST FLAVIO
FALCONE HAS BECOME
AN ICON IN BRAZIL FOR
HIS UNIQUE APPROACH
TO REACHING HOMELESS
DRUG ADDICTS
PAGE 4
PAYING
THE PRICE
RENTERS FACING EVICTION
MUST SELF-ADVOCATE
TO RECEIVE HELP
PAGE 6
WORDS FROM
VACCINATED
STREET PAPER
VENDORS
STREET PAPER VENDORS ARE
BEGINNING TO RECEIVE THE
COVID VACCINE, AND WITH THE
WORLD OPENING UP AGAIN,
THAT’S MORE THAN WELCOME.
PAGE 10
VOICES OF
OUR COMMUNITY
PAGES 4, 11, 12
EVENTS / PUZZLES
PAGE 13
RESOURCES
PAGE 15
MAY 2021 | Vol.26 Issue 5
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:
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
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i(͠T`7<=נ`7<= 
9ׁH $http://denvervoice.org/subscriptionsׁׁЈנ`7<= ˁ9ׁHmailto:program@denvervoice.orgׁׁЈנ`7<= ̢9ׁHmailto:ads@denvervoice.orgׁׁЈנ`7<= сu9ׁHhttp://denvervoice.orgׁׁЈ׉EEDITOR’S NOTE
SINCE LAST MARCH, several VOICE
vendors have not been comfortable
with being around others, so
as more of them return to their
vending spots, we are finally getting
a chance to hear their stories of how
things have been for them.
For this issue, we asked vendors
ELISABETH MONAGHAN
MANAGING EDITOR
what things they weren’t able to do
this past year that they’re looking
forward to doing again. You can
read their responses on page 4.
We’re also hoping to publish a special issue later this summer,
where vendors will share more about their experiences over the
past 12-plus months.
An additional outlet where vendors will be telling their
stories is the recently launched City Cast Denver podcast.
Each month, City Cast airs VOICE on the Street, which is
a segment that features a Denver VOICE vendor. For their
first installment in March, they interviewed John Alexander.
Early on in the shutdown, Alexander had COVID. One
day, he wakened in a hospital bed to discover he’d been there
for several weeks, recovering from the virus. You can check
out City Cast, or subscribe to their newsletter by visiting
citycast.fm/denver.
If you are among those who are leaving the house more
these days, keep an eye out for Denver VOICE vendors. If you
would like a copy of the latest issue but don’t have any cash on
hand, you can pay with Venmo. As VOICE vendor Raelene
Johnson points out, not only are Venmo payments convenient
for both readers and vendors, it also can be a happy surprise
when vendors discover that one of their buyers has donated
more than the suggested $2. That additional amount can
make all the difference in a vendor’s day. ■
May CONTRIBUTORS
PAULA BARD is an award-winning fine art
photographer, writer, and activist. She lives
on a mountain top southwest of Denver.
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.
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.
DENVERVOICE.ORG
CE.ORG
@deeOCE
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Jennifer Seybold
MANAGING EDITOR
Elisabeth Monaghan
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
Anthony Cornejo
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
Hannah Bragg
VOLUNTEER COPY EDITORS
Kersten Jaeger
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.
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.
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 989 Santa Fe Drive, Denver, CO 80204
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,
but prospective vendors must arrive by 10:00 a.m.
WRITERS
Lando Allen
Paula Bard
Giles Clasen
Robert Davis
Frances Ford
Pepper-Lee
Raelene Johnson
Jerry Mullenix
Larmarques Smith
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Nikki Lawson, President
Michelle Stapleton, Vice President
Lori Holland, Treasurer
Jeff Cuneo, Secretary
Chris Boulanger
Donovan Cordova
Pamela Gravning
Raelene Johnson
Zephyr Wilkins
2 DENVER VOICE May 2021
STAFF
CONTRIBUTORS
BOARD
CONTACT US
׉	 7cassandra://zaDvg1YnbE-tSv646pyrd5oO51cFNo177e3pViXOfCE!` `7<=׉E,VOICES OF OUR COMMUNITY
OUR Streets:
CHARI
BY PAULA BARD
CHARI AND HER HUSBAND began their
married life at Resurrection Village, a tent
city set up north of Downtown Denver.
The Village was created to honor Dr. King’s
1968 Resurrection City, a Washington DC
vision of organizing the poor for racial and
economic justice. ■
OUR Streets are stories of Denver’s unhoused
residents as captured by Paula Bard, who walks the
streets of Denver to photograph the faces and collect
the stories of those her city has abandoned.
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.
May 2021 DENVER VOICE 3
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VENDOR
THIS COLUMN IS A PLACE FOR DENVER
VOICE VENDORS TO RESPOND TO QUESTIONS
FROM OUR READERS AND STAFF.
Q
Over the past year, what
was something you couldn’t
do that you’re looking
forward to returning to?
COURTESY OF REUTERS / INSP.NGO
CLOWNING IS SERIOUS
BUSINESS FOR DOCTOR TO
HOMELESS COMMUNITY IN
A
RAELENE JOHNSON
Being able to visit in people’s homes. Being
able to go sight-seeing at places that have
been closed for the last eyar. Also, being able
to travel more!
JERRY MULLENIX
Getting back to work for the VOICE and
getting my camper running so I can get on
the road.
LARMARQUES SMITH
Going to an amusement park. I used to go to
amusement parks every summer. I plan to
get a season pass to Elitch Gardens.
BRAZIL’S “CRACKLAND”
BY JAKE SPRING
Costumed as a jester with a bright red nose, psychiatrist Flavio
Falcone has become an icon in Brazil’s “cracolandia,” treating a
growing number of Brazilians driven onto the street by the COVID-19
pandemic which has devastated the country’s economy. Working with
actress Andrea Macera, Falcone uses costumes and music to break
the ice with those who are homeless as a first step to getting them the
mental health and addiction treatment they need.
IN HIS WHITE DOCTOR’S JACKET, psychiatrist Flavio Falcone
could not get homeless drug addicts to talk.
But costumed as a jester with a bright red nose, he has
become an icon in Brazil’s “cracolandia,” or crackland: a
dangerous wasteland of about eight blocks in the historic
center of Sao Paulo where addicts twitch and pushers roam.
Falcone’s patients know him as The Clown, not as a doctor.
He treats a growing number of Brazilians driven onto the
street by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has devastated
the country’s economy. Early government support, a lifeline
for many, has also wavered.
“This character represents the exposure of mistakes, of
the fragility of what exists in the shadow. The exposure of
failures,” said Falcone.
“What makes you laugh is the clown that trips, not the
What do YOU want to ask?
If you have a question or issue you
would like vendors to discuss, please
email community@denvervoice.org.
4 DENVER VOICE May 2021
clown who walks straight. The people who are on the street
are really the failures of capitalist society.”
Falcone is not your average carnival clown.
Infused with hip-hop street culture, he sports a gold chain
and flat brimmed cap and struts the streets followed by a
speaker blaring rap.
Working with actress Andrea Macera, Falcone uses the
costumes and music to break the ice with the homeless as
COURTESY OF REUTERS / INSP.NGO
a first step to getting them the mental health and addiction
treatment they need. During “radio” time organized by
Falcone and Macera, homeless people in crackland can
request songs and even rap along. Around the public square,
addicts huddle together and openly light up slim crack pipes.
His work in the neighborhood since 2012 has earned him
a loyal following. One man who received addiction help
from Falcone tattooed the word “clown” in Portuguese on
his wrist.
With government support receding from crackland,
Falcone has tried to fill the void.
In April 2020, one month after the pandemic first hit
Brazil, the government closed down a homeless shelter as
part of an effort to clean up the city center to make way for
construction. The nearest shelter is about 3 kilometers (1.86
miles) away.
Falcone and Macera helped find housing for about 20
of those displaced and distributed 200 tents provided by a
Brazilian non-government organization. In late 2020, they
launched a new program called “Roof, Work and Treatment”
to offer support to the homeless, with funding from the local
labour prosecutor’s office.
NATIONAL STORY
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The homeless population has surged after 600 reais
($106.16) per month government emergency aid payments
to the poor were reduced and eventually ran out at the end
of 2020. After a delay in congressional approval, payments
are set to resume this month at an even lower rate.
For many, that help is too little, too late. Millions have
sunk into poverty since the start of the year.
For Jonatha de David Sousa Reis and Bruna Kelly Simoes,
that meant losing their home. The couple moved into a
makeshift tent strung between two trees on a public square
in crackland this year.
“As long as there are no jobs, the emergency payment
should have been maintained as it was,” Reis, 34, said. “It’s
been difficult, very difficult.”
They are arriving on the streets just as COVID-19
hits the deadliest point on record in Brazil. Every week
since late February has seen new daily records for deaths
from coronavirus.
Soon, Brazil may overtake the U.S. record of 3,285 deaths
per day, based on a seven-day average, according to the
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the
University of Washington.
Reis said he hoped to get a job back at
habitability standards – received 1,268 substandard living
complaints. That total has grown by 20% since
2017,
according to the agency’s data.
However, the new license would only apply to parcels of
land, not individual units. The ordinance says this approach
is meant to create more equity and streamline both the
implementation process and fee collection.
The ordinance is co-sponsored by Councilwoman Robin
Kneich (At-Large) and Council President Pro Tem Jamie
Torres (District 3).
The stakeholder group includes the City of Boulder,
Elevation Community Land Trust, and the Colorado
Coalition for the Homeless.
“This code shall be construed to ensure public health, safety,
and welfare insofar as they are affected by the continued
occupancy and maintenance of these structures and premises.
In the future, efficiency standards for rental properties to
ensure emission reductions, improved indoor air quality
and affordability of rentals for tenants and landlords may be
implemented into these provisions,” the ordinance reads.
According to data from Denver’s assessor’s office,
the
the shipping
company where he used to work once the pandemic
eases, although that seems unlikely to happen soon.
Epidemiologists expect the outbreak to worsen in the
months to come. Brazil is second to only the United States
in deaths and cases.
For Jailson Antonio de Oliveira, 51, Falcone is his main
lifeline. The clown’s philanthropy effort pays for a room for
himself and his girlfriend, even if he can no longer afford
meat after the emergency payments ran out.
“Today I have a better life because of Flavio Falcone, the
clown,” said Oliveira, with clown tattooed on his wrist. “He’s
my right arm, he helps with everything he can.” ■
Courtesy of Reuters / INSP.ngo
ordinance would apply to approximately 37% of the city’s
housing stock that is currently rented – or around 520,000
properties. This includes 19% of single-family homes, 38% of
condos, and 26% of rowhouses.
Phase 1 is expected to go into effect on January 1, 2022. It will
open rental licensing for all dwelling units on a given parcel.
Phase 2 will go into effect the following year and require
landlords who offer, provide, or operate two or more rental
dwellings to be licensed. Examples include apartment
buildings, condo units, and rowhome units.
Phase 3 will require landlords who offer a single rental unit
on a given parcel to be licensed. This includes single-family
homes and ADUs.
These licenses will be renewable every four years unless
property ownership changes.
Application fees for the license will vary by property type,
DENVER PLANS LONG-TERM
RENTAL PROPERTY LICENSE
AMID PUSH FOR GREATER
PROTECTIONS FOR RENTERS
BY ROBERT DAVIS
COUNCIL PRESIDENT STACY GILMORE (District 11) introduced
an ordinance on Wednesday, April 14, to create a long-term
rental license for landlords designed to promote healthy
homes across the city.
The purpose of the ordinance is to centralize regulations
for landlords and tenants of residential property, according
to the ordinance’s text. Currently, Denver does not track its
rental stock data nor keep records of landlords and operators.
If passed, the ordinance would require landlords to provide
an executed copy of leases greater than 30 days to the city and
provide tenants with information about their rights. Tenants
must also be informed of their rights and resources in cases
where a landlord formally demands rental payments.
To obtain a license, landlords would need to have a certified
private home inspector inspect their units before applying.
Parcels with two or more rental units will be required to
have at least 10% of their units inspected at random. These
provisions mirror Boulder’s rental license model.
Last year, Denver’s Department of Public Health and
Environment – which oversees the city’s residential
according to the plan. Early licensing during Phase 1 will be
$25 but can be cut in half during the early phase. Phases 2 and
3 will require a $50 application fee.
Similarly, license fees will be assessed depending on the
number of units a rental property offers. Single dwelling
units such as apartments will have a $50 license fee, while a
building offering 250 or more units will pay a $500 license fee.
These fees are refundable if the license is not approved.
Building types that are exempt from these regulations
include on-campus college housing, boarding homes, shortterm
rentals, and commercial lodging such as hotels. This
includes new builds that are less than four years old.
Affordable housing developments where 80% or more of
units are income-restricted must show proof of inspection,
even those owned by a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.
The plan was announced amid a concerted effort by City
Council and state lawmakers to increase legal protections for
renters across the state.
Council members Candi CdeBaca (District 9) and Amanda
Sawyer (District 5) are working to build on the city’s eviction
legal defense program from 2018. The proposal would limit
protections to renters earning up to 80% of the city’s median
income—approximately $60,000 per year.
It would also establish a new office within the Department
of Housing Stability that would be responsible for overseeing
the problem.
Meanwhile, state lawmakers are debating Senate Bill
21-173, which would provide renters with a legal avenue to
seek recourse against a landlord for an illegal eviction. It also
prohibits rental agreements from containing provisions that
would shift fees from landlords to renters. ■
Spring
WISH LIST
NEW ITEMS NEEDED:
Socks
Reusable water bottles
Hand-warmers, toothpaste,
deodorant, chapstick
Paper products for the office
GENTLY USED ITEMS NEEDED:
Refurbished laptops or
desktop computers
Backpacks
Ball caps/hats for warm weather
Gloves
Panchos & windbreakers
(Men’s L, XL, XXL)
DENVERVOICE.ORG/VENDOR-NEEDS
Drop-offs are accepted Mon, Weds, Fri.,
9 a.m. – 12 p.m., or schedule a drop-off by
emailing program@denvervoice.org.
May 2021 DENVER VOICE 5
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 
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PAYING THE PRICE
Renters facing eviction must self-advocate to receive help
BY GILES CLASEN AND ROBERT DAVIS
ALLEN BOE LIVES FOR THE SIMPLE THINGS IN LIFE.
He gets joy from volunteering and serving others. He enjoys a
smoke. He likes getting takeout now and again. And he loved
his old apartment.
The apartment wasn’t much to speak of, but it was Boe’s.
He kept it clean and spent a lot of time watching TV. Most
importantly, Boe could afford the apartment on his Social
Security income.
Boe had $250 left of his Social Security each month after
paying his rent and his phone bill – his most significant
monthly expenses. He also had food stamps.
“I could live a good life on $250 a month after my bills were
paid,” Boe said.
On October 20, 2020, Boe found a note taped to his
door from Cornerstone, an apartment management
company, saying he had less than two months to vacate the
apartment he loved. The building had been sold and would
be undergoing construction before it was reopened to new
renters. Cornerstone was hired by the new owner to manage
the building moving forward.
Boe didn’t have a backup plan or significant savings. He
was never able to save much for retirement.
After receiving the notice that his lease wouldn’t be
renewed, Boe looked for a new apartment. Realizing he
couldn’t afford much in the Denver area, Boe wasn’t sure what
his next step would be, but he was coming to the realization
that he was likely to be homeless.
Luckily, Boe walked by the Safe Outdoor Space
in
Capitol Hill as volunteers were working on it. The Safe
Outdoor Space’s campsite is a legally sanctioned, temporary
encampment for individuals experiencing homelessness.
It is managed by Colorado Village Collaborative and located
in the parking lot of Denver Community Church.
Boe utilized his background in construction and
volunteered to help build the shelter. This ensured that
Boe was able to live in the encampment when he moved
out of his apartment. After moving into the camp, Boe
realized the space serves a much bigger purpose to the
unhoused community.
“I don’t
think people understand what
it
is like to be
homeless,” Boe said. “Everyone else looks at you like you’re
worthless. But I want to see them try it. It takes a lot of work
to get through a day. Just getting the things you need, getting
around, getting to appointments, trying to find food, trying
to find housing – it takes work to be homeless.”
Boe also acknowledged the role community plays for those
experiencing homelessness. “Everybody is in this together.
We need to help each other. Sometimes, just a pat on the back
means everything to these people.”
At 65-years-old, Boe still has the energy to work a regular
job, but it’s been difficult to find someone to give him
the opportunity.
After fracturing his leg on a job site several years ago, Boe
was forced into retirement. He’s been collecting disability and
Social Security benefits ever since and hopes to find rental
assistance to afford an apartment in Denver.
A PRICE TO PAY
Before being evicted, Boe lived at the Cornerstone
Apartments at 1317 N. Pearl St. in Denver’s Capitol Hill
neighborhood.
For their part, Cornerstone offered to refund residents one
month of rent plus their security deposit for the inconvenience.
Shannon MacKenzie, deputy director of the Colorado
CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
Poverty Law Project, described Boe’s case as heartbreaking
because it represents a loophole that landlords exploit in the
eviction moratoria put in place due to COVID-19.
The moratoria, issued by the Centers for Disease Control
and Congress via the CARES Act, protected approximately
6 DENVER VOICE May 2021
׉	 7cassandra://PsbVbjFYboA8Mxv4ygxZZ_m9uL44FRfrGKk_zNGWxd0!` `7<=׉E%LOCAL STORY
46% of the nation’s renters from eviction in most cases,
according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Meanwhile,
the moratorium Polis issued in March 2020 provided a
broader set of protections for renters and homeowners.
However, Polis’s order expired on January 1, 2021.
State lawmakers went a step further to provide residents
of mobile homes with additional means of avoiding eviction.
They passed several amendments to the Colorado Mobile
Home Park Act during the 2020 legislative session, one of
which allows tenants to stay in their unit after their lease
expires if they have nowhere else to go. Only under very
limited circumstances could these renters be evicted.
MacKenzie said Boe might have been protected from a
lease termination if he had filed a Declaration of Need, the
document required to evoke state-level protections from
eviction. This document could have allowed Boe to stay in
place until June 30, 2021.
However, MacKenzie said this raises another issue with
Colorado’s system – it doesn’t fully educate renters about
their rights.
“We are seeing tons of folks who don’t know about the
protections or that they have to sign a declaration to evoke
the protections,” MacKenzie told the Denver VOICE in an
emailed statement.
Since Colorado’s protections ended, MacKenzie said
the courts that once dismissed eviction holdover cases are
now ushering them through. She has also seen cases where
tenants obtain rental assistance, pay their landlord back and
future rent, and still have eviction proceedings filed against
them by landlords.
One way to stem the impending flow of evictions would
be to implement protections for apartment lease holdovers
similar to those afforded to mobile home residents, MacKenzie
added. However, Colorado’s political climate makes it difficult
to imagine a path forward for this kind of legislation.
“I can guarantee pushing forth that legislation would be
met with great opposition from the Apartment Association,
the Tschetter law firm (a Colorado law firm specializing in
representing landlords in eviction cases), and other property
owner groups,” MacKenzie said.
THE SYSTEM FAILED
Charlie Hogan, who is the chief operating officer with
Cornerstone, said that Boe’s situation was unfortunate. He
said Cornerstone tried to offer Boe and the other residents
as many opportunities as possible to find a new home before
they had to vacate their apartment. Cornerstone also offered
to return the rental deposit to all renters and gave an incentive
that if renters moved out by November 30, 2021, the renters
would receive back one month’s rent.
“Understand that from a property management standpoint,
our clients, our customers, are renters,” Hogan said. “We
really do come from a place of trying to make sure that we’re
providing great customer service.”
Hogan said that Boe and the other residents of the building
were on month-to-month leases. Landlords and renters each
can find value in this kind of lease because it offers flexibility
to both parties. Unfortunately, such a lease also leaves renters
vulnerable to a lease that may be terminated by the landlord at
any time and with little notice.
According to Hogan, the previous landlord did a
disservice to Boe and the others by not signing long-term
rental agreements.
Landlords are required by law to give renters a 15-day
notice when their lease is being terminated. Cornerstone
went beyond that requirement, providing the residents of
1317 N. Pearl St. with a 52-day termination notice.
Hogan said Boe never reached out to Cornerstone to ask
about other rental possibilities within the company or explain
his circumstances. Instead, Boe stopped paying rent and
remained in the apartment beyond the date he was required
to move out.
Disputing this claim, Boe said that he has records of the
calls he made to Cornerstone, but those calls were focused
on getting back his deposit, not asking for help with finding
a new apartment.
Cornerstone started the eviction process in December of
2020 but stopped once Boe left the property on December
18. Cornerstone then waived any legal fees associated with
beginning the eviction process. Additionally, the company
did not pursue the back rent Boe had not paid and returned
his security deposit to him.
Hogan said Cornerstone works to offer apartments at
competitive rates. The company manages 4,700 apartments,
and the company’s average rent is $1,200 per month. This is
below the average Denver rental cost of $1,464 according to
the Apartment Association of Metro Denver. The average
household income of Cornerstone’s renters is $43,000, well
below the Denver median household income of $68,592.
Cornerstone also has more than 100 renters who receive
Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers, a housing assistance
program for low-income individuals.
Hogan said he couldn’t guess at a hypothetical of what he
would have done had Boe called the company for help. He also
said that because Boe didn’t reach out and instead stopped
paying rent, there isn’t much Cornerstone could do. They can’t
help someone if they don’t know a renter needs help.
Jim Lorensen, president and founder of Cornerstone,
seconded Hogan, adding, “We’re not a social agency. At
some point, people need to ask for help. Where is his
family? Where are his friends? Where is his church? If [Boe]
needed it then he should have asked for assistance. There
are systematic failures here, and unfortunately, this guy got
caught in that downdraft.”
Lorensen said he believes his company went above and
beyond in trying to show compassion to Boe and the other
renters of the building. Cornerstone could have pursued
collection of the back rent Boe didn’t pay, or they could
have kept the deposit in lieu of rent. Instead, Cornerstone
issued Boe a new check for the deposit once they learned
Boe hadn’t received the first one.
Lorensen also explained that the sale of the Pearl Street
property was not a major corporate transaction. “The
individual who owns this property is not some wealthy
individual or some large corporation. They bought this
building as an investment.”
According to tax records from the Denver Assessor’s
Office, the building at 1317 Pearl St was sold to a company
called 1317 Pearl, LLC. for $3.5 million in October 2020.
That LLC was formed in September 2020, and the main
address registered for 1317 Pearl, LLC. with the state of
Colorado is the same address as Riker Capital, a Chicagobased
investment company.
MARKETED OUT
Boe said that staying at the Safe Outdoor Space has given him
a little hope. He’s seen several of his neighbors get jobs and
move out of the camp, and he is saving every penny he can to
help him move into a new apartment.
Boe believes he’ll get his chance to find an apartment and
is hopeful he will receive some rental assistance. But he fears
without assistance he won’t be able to afford an apartment
for long.
According to the latest data from the Colorado Association
of Realtors (CAR), Denver’s affordability index dropped
10% during 2020. The affordability index measures whether
housing is affordable for those earning the median income for
the region.
In Denver, the median wage is now approximately 70% of
what is necessary to afford a median-priced single-family
home and just 78% of what is needed to be competitive in the
overall market, according to the index.
One factor for the drop in affordability is the city’s
historically low inventory. In March 2007, shortly before the
Great Recession began, Denver had more than 25,000 homes
listed for sale. In March 2021, that total stood at just over
1,900, representing a 70% year-over-year decline, according
to CAR data.
The short supply of homes also has caused home values to
appreciate at record paces. Last year, home values appreciated
nearly 22% in Denver County, according to CAR. The median
home price stands at $635,000 while the average sale price is
nearly $100,000 more.
Because of increasing home prices and lower inventory,
more individuals are renting. This increased demand for
rental properties means an increased cost for apartments,
adding financial stress to those with lower incomes.
Meanwhile, the pool of competitors for homes has grown
to include private equity and other investment firms. A report
by The Wall Street Journal found many firms are investing
in large swaths of land and existing apartment structures to
renovate and flip for a premium return.
According to the John Burns Consulting Firm out of
Houston, investors have likely accounted for around 24%
of home sales in real estate boomtowns such as Miami and
Las Vegas. The firm also anticipates this trend to continue,
which will lead home values to see two more years of doubledigit
increases.
The fast-rising costs of housing in Denver leave individuals
like Boe more vulnerable to becoming homeless.
Boe said he never expected to be homeless. He worked his
whole life and took care of himself. He never made enough to
save much for retirement but hoped his Social Security would
be enough so that he wouldn’t have to worry about money
once he left work. As Boe pointed out, if this could happen to
him, it could happen to anyone.
Explaining how he felt about being evicted, Boe said
bluntly, “It is kind of heartless,” he said. “People should be a
lot more understanding of other people’s situation and not be
so worried about money.” ■
For information about emergency rental and mortgage
assistance, visit cdola.colorado.gov/rental-mortgage-assistance.
CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
May 2021 DENVER VOICE 7
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 
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Seen but Unseen:
VEHICLE DWELLING
IN RURAL COLORADO
BY PAULA BARD
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
THE SAFE PARKING
INITIATIVE
Sheltering in vehicles is often the last stop.
SHELTERING IN VEHICLES is often the last stop. Hundreds
of individuals and families are estimated to be sheltering
in vehicles in the Denver metro area. According to the
Metro Denver Homeless Initiative Point-in-Time Survey,
there are nearly a thousand individuals statewide, a figure
supplemented by municipal- and county-level counts.
The actual number tends to be higher than official counts
because surveys of the unhoused tend to undercount people
living in vehicles.
Vehicle dwellers are considered the ‘seen but unseen’
unhoused — very easy to miss. They are indistinguishable
on a lot with many other cars or discretely parked in a
neighborhood. Sheltering in vehicles is often the last stop
for those who lose jobs and permanent housing. Cars tend to
break down and are increasingly expensive to fix, register and
insure. (Not so long ago, repair shop rates were $20 per hour.)
Without intervention and support, many vehicle dwellers can
spiral down into homelessness and end up on the streets.
The Safe Parking Initiative is a volunteer organization that
focuses on creating safe parking spaces for people living in
their cars. They collaborate with faith-based organizations
and have set up safe parking lots in Arvada, Broomfield,
Longmont, and Boulder. They are working on lots in Denver
and Adams County. Each small and dispersed site hosts
fewer than 10 Vehicles.
“What we want to see is that every community could do
this if they’ve got people who are living in vehicles,” said
Chelsey Baker-Hauck, co-founder of the Safe Parking
Initiative. “They need to be connected to services and need
a safe place to park.” Right now, the group is focusing on the
7 county Denver metro area and aiming for underutilized
church parking lots. In Jefferson County, in addition to the
safe parking lot in Arvada, there is one planned for Golden.
Working in concert with community partners, the
goal is not just to create a place for people who shelter in
vehicles, but to wrap them around with essential support
that includes sanitation, showers, help with keeping vehicles
road-worthy, and keeping track of who’s coming and going —
with a formal check-in process. They encourage the hosting
groups to offer housing assistance, job training, healthcare
access, and food.
Breckenridge has led the way in Colorado. Their local
overnight parking program offers a safe and supportive
environment just at night for 10 residents living in their cars.
It is an overnight parking lot with portable restrooms and
snow plowing for both the working and non-working people
who are unhoused. It began as a collaboration between
Good Bridge Community and the Summit Colorado
Interfaith Council with local county partners. First in the
state, it has proven to be a successful working model.
“We’ve heard about people in Montrose and Durango.
So there really is need. I think wherever people are living
there’s probably people experiencing homelessness,” said
Baker-Hauck. “What we want
to do is make this model
available and provide technical support assistance to as
many communities as possible. It is such a low-barrier
service; it’s low cost for communities to do. It is easy to scale
up or down.”
She pointed out that it’s easy and effective in fitting in
with community norms. The Safe Parking Initiative group
can work with unique individual needs, enabling the
community to do it for themselves.
NIKI
“They are not designed to live
in, and they don’t last.”
IMAGINE LIVING THE TRAVELING RV LIFE, and your partner dies
unexpectedly. Do you carry on? Niki’s partner, Kenny, died
in her arms a year ago. They had been traveling together for
10 years. “It’s a choice; we had to keep the scenery changing,
otherwise he got bored.”
She intends to resume a solo RV traveling life after a
challenging year of grieving. She has been living at her
mother-in-law’s ranch up in Park County while fixing up
the RV. Confident about her own abilities, she intends to
depend on their previous itinerant handyman skillset for
travel — an ambitious project with her older RV.
Niki is antsy; she and her dog are ready to hit the road.
“Living in a vehicle is a choice because that means you go
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
anywhere, anytime.” She is ready. Possibly, she’ll head
back to back to California, where she grew up. “At least the
part that hasn’t burned,” She is anxious to meet her first
grandchild. Alone now, she still hears the road call.
8 DENVER VOICE May 2021
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JESSE
She bought her current RV a year ago, and
everything was supposed to work. It doesn’t.
BURSTING WITH STORIES, Jesse laughs easily, “I have literally
been robbed like five times here. I’ve had to replace all my
clothes and jewelry, and all I have, all the beads and stuff. So,
they steal the beads and whatever they can get their freaking
hands on. They will take it if you turn your back.” Ah yes, life
on the road.
Friendly and engaging, Jesse talks a mile-a-minute, all the
while doting on her two companionable little dogs. It’s cold
in Colorado, and the shivering little dogs need jackets, she
said. They all live in her RV, currently parked at the Rainbow
Trout Campground just off Highway 285 in Jefferson
County. It is one of the few winter RV campgrounds in the
state. She migrates between the campground, which costs
$600 a month, to the free dispersed camping out on Jefferson
County’s vast National Forest and BLM lands — camping is
free for 14 days at a time. Sometimes. she travels down to the
Colorado state campgrounds, like Chatfield. But she finds
the city often dangerous — more drugs, less safety.
After 10 years as a Head Start teacher and a stint at
Denver’s Purina Plant, she “snapped her foot pushing
a thousand-pound cart;” no workers comp. At 54, after
work injuries and debilitating migraines, Jesse is living on
disability. Her last job as a West Colfax hotel manager didn’t
last, she said. She was too kind. Then she was jailed after
rescuing her mother-in-law from a nursing home, another
story that comes with a bemused smile.
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
Jesse and her partner, Derrick, a commercial electrician
who “knows how to do everything,” live in two uninsulated
1980’s RV’s that require endless repair and clever
innovations. The roofs leak, the four batteries alternately go
out, the generators break down, they run out of gas when
the temperature plummets, leading to emergencies with no
heat and no cooking. Jesse is insulating the walls, which, she
says laughingly are just, “metal and wallpaper.” But it’s no
joke when temperatures are below freezing. She bought her
current RV a year ago, and everything was supposed to work.
It doesn’t. And now it won’t pass emissions.
After growing up in LA, she raised her five children in
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
Northern California. She stays in touch with all of them
and tells everyone she hopes fervently for grandchildren.
An ambitious cook, she treats everyone in her vicinity with
generous home-cooked meals and sometimes, even pies.
Capable and buoyant, she is at peace with her current life.
BLAIR
Aligning her activism with
freedom of movement.
BLAIR LIVES THE COMMITTED LIFE of an activist and online
graphic designer, all from her car — as long as she can
maintain internet access. With her souped-up jeep, she
has lived the vehicle life for almost a year. Her Colorado
activism began with a legislative research job and has
moved on to support the Safe Parking Initiative, where she
helps organize sanctioned parking spaces for fellow vehicle
dwellers. She supports Denver’s unhoused with Allies to
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
Abolitionists. Currently, she is offering haircuts on Mutual
Aid Mondays to those in Denver’s unhoused encampments.
Originally from Alabama, she enjoyed summer church
visits to Colorado and eventually migrated to the state. Now
she has managed to align her activism with freedom of
movement and huge doses of the outdoors, while avoiding
Colorado’s prohibitive housing costs. With glorious views,
she is currently nestled up on a jeep trail overlooking Idaho
Springs. Her strong environmental leanings drive decisions;
she has fashioned a sturdy rock fire-pit and cleaned up the
area around her campsite.
With creativity, Blair has fashioned a life that suits her.
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
CREDIT: PAULA BARD
Next, she heads to Arizona to help stave off international
mining giant Resolution Copper’s exploitation of sacred
Apache lands, called Oak Flat. She can hit the road in a flash.
May 2021 DENVER VOICE 9
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PHOTO COURTESY OF THE CONTRIBUTOR
DISPATCHES FROM VACCINATED
STREET PAPER VENDORS: “NOBODY
SHOULD GO WITHOUT THE SHOT”
BY JILL SHAUGHNESSY
EDITED FOR LENGTH AND CLARITY
With Covid vaccines being rolled out differently across the world, that
means marginalized and vulnerable communities in different parts
of the world are receiving immunization at different rates. But it does
mean some good news: street paper vendors are beginning to receive
the jab, and with the world opening up again, that’s more than welcome.
WITH PFIZER, ASTRAZENECA, MODERNA, JOHNSON AND JOHNSON,
and more vaccines beginning to become available, countries
are starting to vaccinate their populations, starting with the
elderly. The rollout of the vaccine begins to provide a light at
the end of a very dark tunnel that is the COVID-19 pandemic.
However,
the process to grab a vaccine appointment
remains a mystery to many. Homeless populations are
eligible for the shot in different parts of the world.
The requirements differ globally, but a few street paper
vendors have gotten their jab.
In Nashville, Tennessee, soon-to-be expired doses are
being sent to homeless shelters around the city. As of 5 April,
10 DENVER VOICE May 2021
Tennessee was in phase 3 of the vaccine distribution. That
means all people considered homeless, regardless of age, are
eligible to get the shot.
Three vendors from The Contributor street paper
in Nashville have already received their vaccine. In an
interview, vendor Paul describes his experience getting the
jab at Music City Center. He tells The Contributor that the
entire process took about 30 minutes. In Paul’s experience, it
took 15 minutes for the shot, and 15 minutes of observation
time to ensure he didn’t have a bad reaction. He describes
how he experienced no pain with the shot and was ready to
grab a cup of coffee and get to work afterward.
Paul encourages everyone to get the vaccine. “Nobody
should go without the shot. Nobody. The more people get
the shots, get vaccinated, the sooner the city can reopen to
full capacity,” he said.
Teresa is another vendor who received her vaccine in
Nashville. She was originally turned away at the Walmart
vaccination center because she didn’t have health insurance.
To her relief, after an hour of waiting, she was able to get
the shot anyway. Teresa had no real pain after, just a little
discomfort in her arm.
“It’s not as bad as you think it would be. Even the scaredy
cats that are afraid of shots, it’s not that bad,” she said.
Megaphone in Vancouver, Canada is also seeing some
success with vaccine distribution for their sellers.
“We have been fairly fortunate in Vancouver, B.C. There
have been several vaccination clinics for marginalized
people — including vendors — in the Downtown Eastside,
which is home to mostly low-income residents and also a
lot of people experiencing homelessness. In fact, the office
building where Megaphone is located hosted a vaccine
clinic (Friday 26 March) and many of our vendors signed
up,” said Megaphone editor Paula Carlson.
Peter Thompson, a vendor for Megaphone, received his
vaccine at the Carnegie Community Center. He did not
׉	 7cassandra://KHCNXG9AwAMKNE036tAQ8jYM8NMLmBnwilq1BFCQCBo&R` `7<=׉EPAGE TITLE
WRITING THROUGH
HARD TIMES
COURTESY OF DENVER PUBLIC LIBRARY
AND LIGHTHOUSE WRITERS WORKSHOP
FRANCES FORD
THE FAMILY FOOT ITCH
My grandmother wanted wheels to turn and bells to jingle
each toss of the harness, brightness of many paints
and arcane carvings to curve about the wagon boards,
rolling hills and road dust and river roars,
and streams of strangers vague or distinct
as dreams can be. She dreamed of an omened life,
unveiled in the crystal or the card by candlelight,
lines that loop the open hand. She couldn’t touch
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE CONTRIBUTOR
that unguarded fate, but she always said
she wished she were a gypsy.
Kee-ack, kee-ack, kee-ack, kee-ack:
as if the heart counts
schedule an appointment ahead of time but rather walked
into the vaccine center after hearing about it from the
Megaphone office.
“It is a feeling of relief as it brings me one step closer to
seeing my family again. It has been so long since I have seen
them... It takes a toll on a person — mostly the emotional
stress,” he said in the March edition of Megaphone. After the
shot, Thompson is feeling “fine, grateful, and relieved.”
In the United Kingdom, seventy-year-old Gordon was the
first Big Issue North vendor to get the shot. Gordon received
the jab in January due to his lung condition and it provided a
beacon of hope for him.
“I know loads of people are still waiting to have the first
injection so I’m very lucky,” said Gordon.
In Hamburg, Germany, residents of emergency shelters
will be vaccinated in the coming weeks, but the rollout
remains slow.
One vendor of the Hinz&Kunzt street paper has been
vaccinated, however. “Elsa is older than 80 years and those
people have the highest priority to be vaccinated here in
Germany,” said Benjamin Laufer, an editor at Hinz&Kunzt.
It appears more and more vendors will be getting the jab in
the upcoming months. In the United States, President Biden
plans to have 500 million total doses administered by August.
Although the European Union missed its first vaccination
goal, the world is closer to normalcy than it was a year ago.
“It’s really important that people get it. Better to be safe
than sorry,” said vaccinated vendor Gordon. “The quicker
we can get out of this lockdown, the better. I’m sick of this
lockdown. I’m bored of it. I just can’t wait to get back selling
the magazine again.” Big Issue North and Big Issue (UK)
vendors in England and Wales return to their pitches. ■
Courtesy of INSP.ngo
May 2021 DENVER VOICE 11
The Hard Times Writing Workshop is a collaboration between Denver Public Library and Lighthouse
Writers Workshop. It’s open to all members of the public, especially those experiencing homelessness.
Each month, the Denver VOICE publishes a selection of writing from these workshops.
Virtual workshops: lighthousewriters.org/workshop/denver-public-library-hard-times
More writing by these featured poets: writedenver.org
far off whispers of a train on track.
It travels at the speed of thought,
snags at me, takes me along,
and I, too, can dream.
PEPPER-LEE
A THANKLESS JOB
So I think Im falling in love.
In love with the fame, that accompanies this game.
...Just in love with the pain.
A pre-meditated plan gone all awry.
A well articulated genius
Not at all privy to pry.
Cannot tell a lie,
Promises: meant to be broken.
Trauma: Life’slove token,
Of appreciation
As well,
A memory of life’s degradation.
Why love me and not touch me?
Hug me, and NEGATE our lovemaking,
Just totally?
Kiss me,
And yet, ABANDON me?
A stranger to these streetsssss,
I’d by far much rather be,
Rather I’ve harbored a tendency
To share myself so intimately
To a beloved stranger,
All up in, and within my sheets!
“Who pays you to think?”
It’s what they consistently told me.
Put yourself in my shoes,
Catch yourself elatedly molding.
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9ׁH  http://facebook.com/DenverBazaarׁׁЈנ`7<> k9ׁHhttp://mcadenver.org/eventsׁׁЈנ`7<>
 (̔9ׁH $http://watch.eventive.org/denverfilmׁׁЈ׉EwIN YOUR OWN WORDS
Man! It is already known that we help a lot of rich people
get richer, and people in power are fighting pay raises already.
I wonder what we’re going to do when we reach the future.
There are things that are here already like the selfcheckout
lines at the grocery store. Cars that drive
themselves will replace Uber drivers, truck drivers, and
more. I don’t want to scare people. I just want to give people
a heads up on what is coming our way. ■
A Hard Talk WITH SELF
BY RAELENE JOHNSON, VOICE VENDOR
LANDO ALLEN. CREDIT: SARAH HARVEY
TODAY!
BY LANDO ALLEN, VOICE VENDOR
I LOOK AT ALL THE PROBLEMS IN OUR COUNTRY, from Q-Anon,
to people who are racist and say racist things, trying to put
Americans against each other. People who are hungry on
keeping power, and the people who get elected by us and don’t
do anything to help us when we need them to give us a hand.
Personally, I’m tired of the separation stuff they put us
through, but once in a while, I hear something that keeps me
up at night. Right now, [what keeps me up] is technology
that can take people’s jobs. That’s the way of the future, and
it got me scared. People are already struggling to get jobs,
pay for housing and keep themselves from being homeless.
WE HAVE TO TALK ABOUT MASS SHOOTINGS in the USA. It was very
hard to know that where you shop, someone can walk into a
store and kill people. When will the madness with guns stop -
guns that should never be on our streets? How can we be safe
to go about our everyday lives, Self?
It could have been me, Self. How can all the shootings
keep going on, and no party in government will do anything?
Neither side can get it right for us. Why do we have to live in
the madness we are put in?
You overcame death so many times. Now, Self, you have to
be on the lookout, for you may catch a bullet while you’re out
shopping. How can that be?
How can 20 babies in school get killed? Why can’t we stop
making guns for war? Why do we allow people with mental
problems to have guns, Self?
Five days after [the shooting at the King Soopers
in Boulder], I’m waiting for a friend at Collyer Park in
Longmont and saw police surround a car at the same time my
dog wanted to get out of my car. As I shut my car door, a cop
ran and told me I was in the line of fire. He took me to safety,
and 15 minutes later, it was over. I couldn’t believe just going
to the park I could be in the line of fire. Thank God it came to
a peaceful conclusion.
RAELENE JOHNSON. CREDIT: CORTNEY TABERNA
Then, a few days after that, the Motel 6 in Thornton had a
hostage situation for 14 hours. That is the same place my son
and daughter happened to be staying. Thankfully, they were
on their way back from work when it happened.
They were told no one was allowed in or out until it was
over. They couldn’t get to their dogs that were in their motel
room until later in the night, with the police escorting them.
Self, we can’t be so afraid to leave the house, but you must
be careful about what and who is around you. Be right with
your higher power. Always tell your loved ones how much
you love them because you or they may never hear those
words ever again. Just think if your last words were hateful.
How do you think you or your loved ones would feel?
So, Self, be careful. Watch around you and always tell loved
ones how much you love them before it’s too late. ■
Subscribe online:
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AN ISSUE!
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12 DENVER VOICE May 2021
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DENVER FILM: VIRTUAL CINEMA
Choose from a wide variety of arthouse and festival hits, all from the comfort
of your own home. A portion of the proceeds will support Denver Film, which
operates Colorado’s only nonprofit movie theater, the Sie FilmCenter.
WHEN: Ongoing
COST: $13
MORE INFO: watch.eventive.org/denverfilm
RICK GRIFFITH: NON-VIOLENCE & ACTIVISM
Artist Rick Griffith is joined by Evan Weissman and Stephen Brackett to discuss nonviolence
and activism in art and beyond, asking the questions: How do we continue
to apply pressure to our government? What is the action that moves the needle? How
do you take activism from the digital world and social media to the real world?
WHEN: May 5, 5 p.m.
COST: Pay what you can.
MORE INFO: mcadenver.org/events
FRIDAY NIGHT BAZAAR: RINO ART DISTRICT
Drink, eat, and shop local at this festive community event.
WHEN: May 7, 14, 21, and 28, 4 p.m. - 9 p.m.
COST: Free entry.
WHERE & MORE INFO: 2424 Larimer St. | facebook.com/DenverBazaar
SPRING ARTS AND POTTERY SALE
Purchase one-of-a kind gifts and eye-catching essentials made
by the students and teachers of Washington Heights Arts Center.
Just in time for Mother’s Day! Masks are required.
WHEN: May 8, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
COST: Free entry
WHERE & MORE INFO: Visitor Center at Heritage Lakewood, 801 S. Yarrow St. | lakewood.org
DENVER REFLECTIVE STORYTELLING WORKSHOP
The folks from StoryCenter, a non-profit that helps individuals find and tell stories from
their lives, will create a supportive, online space where participants can gather as a
community to share their own personal struggles, joys, and moments of resilience.
WHEN: May 14, 12 p.m. - 1:15 p.m.
COST: Free but registration is required.
MORE INFO: denverlibrary.org/events/upcoming
ACROSS
1. Muslim holy man
5. Eyebrow shape
9. “Th e Sun ___ Rises”
13. Star in Orion
15. Pacifi c palm
16. Shakespearean king
17. Insect stage
18. Ski lift
19. Aft er-bath powder
20. Sultan’s palace
22. Concept in Hinduism
and Buddhism
24. Cobbler cousin
25. Flightless bird of
New Zealand also
known as a takahe
27. Writing a computer
program
30. “Once ___ a time...”
31. Tiptop
32. Fall guy
37. Entangle or disentangle
39. Down with the fl u
40. Expresses exhaustion
or boredom
41. Bones of the hand
and foot
43. Actress Catherine
___-Jones
44. 18-wheeler
45. German songs
47. One with memory loss
51. Behave (like)
52. “I’m a little ___...”
53. Try out
58. Director Preminger
59. Bumpkin
61. Shelf
62. Must-have
63. Canal of song
64. Shouts
65. Gaelic
66. Cincinnati nine
67. Bakery selections
DOWN
1. Colored eye part
2. Gesturer
3. Gelatin substitute
4. Unit of graphic resolution
5. Dead against
6. Genetic messenger
usually abbreviated
in crosswords (but
not this time!)
7. Tax preparer, for short
8. Car roof style
9. Place to exchange vows
10. Discover
11. Game ragout
12. Killer whales
14. Use a username
and password
21. Pants part
23. Snookums
26. Milky gems
27. Food fi sh
28. Brightly colored fi sh
29. Hindu deity
32. Greek letter
33. Geographical index
34. Was in debt
35. Add to the pot
36. Ivan the Terrible, e.g.
38. Cow catcher
42. Nor’s partner
45. Boy
46. With frostiness
47. Do penance
48. Poet’s concern
49. Hoopster Archibald
and statistician Silver
50. Lyric poem
54. Hawaiian strings
55. One way to stand by
56. Lecher’s look
57. Bitter end?
60. Anger
COURTESY OF
DEBORAH LASTOWKA
PUZZLES
Thanks to Deborah Lastowka, who provides this list of ideas for
entertainment people can enjoy while practicing social distancing.
COURTESY OF STREETROOTS
ANSWERS ARE ON PAGE 15
May 2021 DENVER VOICE 13
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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14 DENVER VOICE May 2021
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• 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
׉	 7cassandra://Hfh8LnP3CI02suqiOQShz640GG3G0jRHoscUv_7h460 ` `7<=׉E#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
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES Hot meals served at 1820 Broadway (in front of Trinity United Methodist
Church), Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 11:45-12:15 mealsforpoor.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
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
SUNSHINE BEHAVIORAL HEALTH (YOUTH SERVICES) Services for youth facing substance abuse, addiction, mental
health disorders, or a combination of these conditions. 833-931-2484 sunshinebehavioralhealth.com
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
May 2021 DENVER VOICE 15
DON’T LOOK NOW!
PUZZLES ARE ON PAGE 13
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VOICE has provided jobs
for more than 4,400
people experiencing
homelessness.
For every dollar we take
in, we put $3.00
directly back into the
pockets of those who
need it most.
WITH YOUR
HELP, WE
CAN DO
MORE.
DENVERVOICE.ORG/DONATE
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