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2
SUGGESTED
DONATION
@DenverVOICE
PAYING TRIBUTE TO
BRIAN AUGUSTINE
PAGE 8
RESIDENT OF THE STREETS
TALKS ABOUT NAVIGATING
RELATIONSHIPS WITH BOTH
UNHOUSED AND HOUSED
MMUNITIES
H
COMMUNITIES PAGE 6
40 YEARS OF
HOMELESSNESS
PAUL BODEN, EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR OF THE WESTERN
REGIONAL ADVOCACY PROJECT,
OUTLINES THE HISTORY OF
SOCIAL DISINVESTMENT IN THE
COUNTRY SINCE THE ‘80S.
PAGE 11
ARE YOU REALLY
LISTENING?
VENDOR FOR MONTREAL’S
STREET PAPER L’ITINÉRAIRE
EXPLAINS THAT
COMMUNICATING WITH HER
CUSTOMERS IS IMPORTANT, BUT
SO IS LISTENING TO PASSERSBY.
PAGE 5
VOICES OF
OUR COMMUNITY
PAGES 8, 9, 10, 12
EVENTS / PUZZLES
PAGE 13
RESOURCES
PAGE 15
FEBRUARY 2023 | Vol.28 Issue 2
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: GILES CLASEN
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WHEN VENDORS FIRST TALKED about
what question they wanted to answer
for this month’s Ask a Vendor, the
initial ideas were about love and
friendship. And then we discovered
our longtime vendor and dear friend
to many, Brian Augustine, had taken
his life.
Suddenly, the focus shifted to
ELISABETH MONAGHAN
MANAGING EDITOR
celebrating Brian’s life.For anyone
who knew Brian, he had his share
of physical health challenges.
Sometimes, months would pass before he would stop by to help
out at the office or purchase his papers, but we knew it was only
a matter of time until he would show up with a bright smile,
wearing a baseball cap or one of his signature holiday-themed
hats. What we didn’t recognize was just how greatly the countless
obstacles Brian faced weighed so heavily on him.
On social media, people frequently post reminders to treat
others with kindness and compassion because we never know
what hardships or difficulties anyone else is facing. We are told
to check on the people we love and let them know we’re thinking
of them. Yet, despite those reminders, people dear to us slip
through the cracks. How do we make sure there are no cracks
to slip through? Love should be all we need, but maybe it’s more
important to know we are loved.
This issue is dedicated to Brian Augustine, but it is also
dedicated to the other vendors we’ve lost since February 2020.
Others who participated in our program in the past may also
have died, but the vendors whose deaths we’re aware of include
Dwayne Pride, Alvin “Mustafa” Cotton, Victor Bowie, and Brian
Augustine. Each of them was a member of the Denver VOICE
family. Each of them played an important role in ensuring we
fulfill our mission to give everyone a second chance by offering
low-barrier opportunities to earn an income. We can never fill
the void left by the loss of Dwayne, Mustafa, Victor, or Brian, but
in the spirit of love and friendship, we will continue to recognize
how their lives enriched the Denver VOICE and made us all
better people because of them. ■
THIS MONTH’S
CONTRIBUTORS
BRIAN AUGUSTINE was a Denver VOICE
vendor for12 years. He was a frequent
contributor to the VOICE, including the
last installment he wrote for this issue
in his column “Back on the Streets.”
GILES CLASEN is a freelance
photojournalist 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.
DENVERVOICE.ORG
CE.ORG
@deeOCE
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
James Kay
MANAGING EDITOR
Elisabeth Monaghan
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
Connie Gaitan
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
Hannah Bragg
VOLUNTEER COPY EDITORS
Aaron Sullivan
Laura Wing
ARTISTS/PHOTOGRAPHERS
Breez
Giles Clasen
WRITERS
Breez
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
Denver metro area experiencing homelessness and poverty.
Since 2007, we have put more than 4,600 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.
John Alexander
Lando Allen
Brian Augustine
Rea Brown
Giles Clasen
Raelene Johnson
Jacob Marsh, Sr.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Nikki Lawson, President
Chris Boulanger, Vice President
Jeff Cuneo, Treasurer
Zephyr Wilkins, Secretary
Donovan Cordova
Raelene Johnson
Jennifer Seybold
Julia Watson
Cabal Yarne
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
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: Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m.
Orientation is held every day we are open, but
prospective vendors must arrive by 10:00 a.m.
2 DENVER VOICE February 2023
STAFF
CONTRIBUTORS
BOARD
CONTACT US
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HOMELESS
PEOPLE
ON THE
STUTTGART
PAINT
ATTACKS
BY DANIEL KNAUS
ANTI-HOMELESS ARCHITECTURE IS ALSO AN EXAMPLE OF (STRUCTURAL) VIOLENCE - THESE BLOCKS HERE IN STUTTGART ARE MEANT TO KEEP HOMELESS PEOPLE FROM FINDING A PLACE TO STAY DRY. CREDIT: DANIEL KNAUS
IN SEPTEMBER I ASKED SEVERAL HOMELESS PEOPLE if they were
scared by the paint attacks (their real names have not been
used). The first answer is usually the same and may baffle
citizens from so-called mainstream society: “What paint
attacks?” Almost all my contacts are still unaware of the
attacks even after they became a regular occurrence. My
first insight is that homeless people are so disadvantaged
by material deprivation, language barriers, or cognitive
Continued on page 4
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.
1
4
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
DONATE
Donations to the Denver VOICE are tax-deductible. 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
3
VOLUNTEER
We need volunteers to help with everything from newspaper
distribution to event planning and management. Contact
program@denvervoice.org for volunteering information.
5
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.
@denverVOICE
2
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.
February 2023 DENVER VOICE 3
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Continued from page 3
impairments, that they hardly bear witness to many issues in
the media - not even a series of violent crimes that seemingly
terrify them.
THE HORRORS OF LIFE ON THE STREETS
Information about the attacks interested almost all my
contacts, but their reactions hardly correspond to what you
may expect either. No one single person expressed fear of
a potentially threatening paint attack. Not Markus, who
claims he’s already afraid enough as people kick him, spit at
him and threaten him with all kinds of things. Nor Harald,
who exclaimed that a paint attack sounds humiliating, but
he’s been set on fire before. He explained that he was under a
bridge and some boys came from both sides – he would have
had no escape route even if he’d woken up in time. There
were burn marks on the concrete like in the war, from the
melted plastic of his sleeping bag.
Many of the reactions of homeless people surrounding the
paint attacks may even irritate a lot of people in mainstream
society. Justus has been living on the streets for twenty years
and snorts at the idea. “Paint? What a joke. Anyone who
does that belongs in the circus!” Only one thought makes
him angry: “Paint is expensive, I could use that money to
buy lunch.” Experiencing violence and worrying about
where the next meal comes from seems so normal for Justus
that he’s hardly affected by the news. The same goes for
Sabine who is at particular risk as a homeless woman: “If I’m
sitting begging, guys press up against me or sit across from
me drooling. Guys come after me, even if I’m on the move,
as soon as I look just a little bit homeless – which happens
quickly when the toilets are closed. Homeless women are
just fair game.”
A SAD TRICK FOR DETERRENCE
Sabine knows all the possible methods of self-defense
well. However, things don’t always go to plan on the streets.
“Pepper spray also blows back in your face sometimes, so I
never trust that. But when I was still on heroin, some friends
told me a trick to scare off attackers – keep a syringe that
is still bloody. Everyone is so afraid of HIV that when you
show them the syringe, even angry young guys give you a
wide berth,” Sabine explains. So, could this be a solution for
more safety? “Of course not, that’s absurd,” she reassures.
“The drugs destroy you. Once addicted, you suffer from
your own fears, for example, fear of withdrawal on the street
without medical help, which can easily be fatal. In the end,
you never have a good chance of defending yourself out
here. Unless you want to carry a machete around in your
backpack? Whoever has the bigger knife, may be attacked
less often. I used to know someone like that but, at some
point, the police checked him and that was the end of that”.
So, if not paint attacks, what’s on homeless peoples’
minds? For Carlos, it’s apprehension towards strangers
passing by: “You lie there and just see shoes and you know
that people are looking down on you both physically and
morally.” Nadine worries about being treated unfairly by
law enforcement officers: “They have me on their radar
because I look different.” Tarek is afraid of exploiters and
fraudsters, such as recruiters for illegal employment (in the
construction sector for example): “There are guys who make
us promises but break our bones rather than pay us.” For
Alan, it’s the frequent panic when loud footsteps approach in
the dark: “If you are alone, you can never sleep in the same
place more than once, otherwise someone will be waiting for
you. And when you’re somewhere new, you don’t know who
you’ll provoke there - shopkeepers, residents, or psychos -
and what kind of trouble you’ll soon be in.
HOME ISN’T BETWEEN FOUR WALLS
Homeless people of course also talk about the stress of
never being able to come home to their own four walls
and constantly fighting for their sheer existence. Dunja
says she worries about where she can get some warm food,
where the next toilet is, and whether she’ll be attacked there.
She says: “If I am sick, how do I cure my cold before it hits
my lungs? Where do I wash my underwear when I don’t
want to go back to my drop-in center because someone
is hostile to me there? Will I see my family again and will
they take me in?” So, there are many fears for people on the
streets, yet they often remain in the dark – just like many
homeless people themselves. Most of the worries of those
affected don’t even make it onto television and at best here
in our street paper. Now, however, it’s come to light that the
suspected perpetrator of the paint attacks was homeless
himself. Sabine’s take on it is that if other poor people are
beating each other up, there’s no solidarity. However, she’s
not surprised: “Life on the streets can break you. Sick people
become even sicker, some become numb or even go crazy. If,
like the victims, the perpetrator too was homeless, society
has two reasons at once to help us more.” ■
Translated from German by Naomi Bruce
Courtesy of Trott-War / International Network of Street Papers
MARIACHI BANDS FIRE UP
FADING MEMORIES OF MEXICAN
ALZHEIMER PATIENTS
BY ALBERTO FAJARDO
MARIACHI BANDS HAVE LONG BEEN A
STAPLE OF MEXICAN CULTURE, and
now their lively songs are finding
a new use: reawakening the
memories of people suffering from
Alzheimer’s disease.
The Mexican Alzheimer’s Center
is promoting the therapy, hoping
the music will stir up recollections of
times past among patients with the
degenerative illness, encouraging
them to sing or even dance to
familiar old tunes.
“It makes me very sad because I
remember my husband, but apart
from that, I listen to the music with
joy because it brings back many
memories that make me very happy,”
MARGARITA RAMIREZ, SUFFERING FROM ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE, SINGS WITH MARIACHI BAND MEMBER AS PART OF THE THERAPY
BEING PROMOTED BY THE MEXICAN ALZHEIMER’S CENTER, WHICH HOPES THE MUSIC WILL STIR UP RECOLLECTIONS OF TIMES PAST
AMONG PATIENTS WITH THE DEGENERATIVE ILLNESS, IN MEXICO CITY, MEXICO OCTOBER 9, 2022. REUTERS/HENRY ROMERO
4 DENVER VOICE February 2023
said Leonor Camacho, a 90-year-old with Alzheimer’s in
Mexico City.
Songs with links to her husband, relatives, and friends are
played to Camacho to complement her daily therapy, which
includes saying tongue twisters with other patients online and
performing manual exercises to stimulate her memory.
The course of therapy led by female guitarists, violinists,
and trumpeters in cropped jackets and wide sombreros
began in September and will continue until mid-November,
encompassing performances throughout the city that patients
can attend.
The shows take in ballrooms, boats on the waterways of
the southern Xochimilco district, and the capital’s traditional
mariachi hotspot, the central square Plaza Garibaldi, in the
hope that venues will fire up patients’ memories.
Regina Altena, head of the Alzheimer’s Center, said studies
show that music stimulates neurotransmitters in the brain,
creating a mental and emotional connection that helps patients
remember and conjure up significant events in their lives.
Originally developed in Germany 11 years ago, the therapy
was given a mariachi twist to adapt it for Mexican use.
Camacho, who has had Alzheimer’s for five years, is one of
an estimated 1.8 million people with dementia in Mexico. Of
them, around 1.3 million are thought to have Alzheimer’s.
During the afternoon, Camacho likes to peruse photo
albums with her daughter Maria del Rocio Maya and keeps her
mind active by preparing food and doing other tasks around
her home.
Since Camacho began the mariachi therapy, Maria del Rocio
said her mother had become livelier and taken up a more active
role in family life again. Before, Camacho tended to sit alone in
an armchair by the window, her daughter said. ■
Courtesy of Reuters / International Network of Street Papers
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PAGE TITLE
ARE YOU REALLY LISTENING?
STREET PAPER VENDORS
ENGAGE IN EVERYDAY ACTS
OF COMMUNICATION
BY JO REDWITCH
Jo Redwitch, a L’Itinéraire vendor at the Rosemont metro station in
Montréal, conveys the importance that comes with listening and
communicating with customers and other people that pass by her pitch.
THE NEED TO COMMUNICATE with another human being is
quite human. Passers-by also have their share of stress on
a daily basis.
Here’s what I tell my clients: “I’m here to sell a magazine,
but I’m here for you first.” Selling is important, but so is
listening to passersby.
THE PINK FLOWERY HIJAB
In a cheerful tone, and spontaneously, I call out to her: “Your
hijab is beautiful! She smiles. Then I add: “You are very
pretty”. Seeing her radiant face, I understand that I have
touched a sensitive chord. She moves forward, rummaging
in her bag. I refuse the money. She doesn’t understand. I
am just happy to see her smile at me and I feel grateful. She
insists on giving me the money. I refuse it and wish her a
nice day by giving her the magazine.
THE ELDERLY LADY
An elderly lady stops, wallet in hand: “Would you like a
magazine, ma’am?” She answers me with a nod. “Do you
want today’s or the one November issue, which contains two
pages I wrote? It’s the article called ‘Letter to my younger
self’.” I show her the photos that accompany my article. She
might be the more visual type, you never know.
She holds her purse tightly, it’s rush hour and it’s crowded,
but this detail doesn’t bother her at all. “My niece just had
a baby. Her husband works a lot and my niece is exhausted.
I’m going to her house to help her cook. “ I listen to her
patiently in spite of the traffic in the subway. It’s 5 p.m. sharp.
Her story over, she leaves me with a big $10. “Keep the
change, thanks, Jo.”
THE EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATOR
Another woman stops and calls out to me: “I read your piece:
‘Letter to my younger self’. Then, as you suggested, I tried
to do the same – I wrote as if I were talking to myself as a
child. I wondered if I had made the right choices, especially
in early adulthood. As I reread it, I started to cry, tore it up,
and threw it in the trash.”
“Why ?” I asked her.
“You know, I work in daycare and have had some serious
health issues this year.” I nodded... “And I had an epiphany.
Since the health thing with my heart, I’ve come to the
realization that I never thought about myself. I sacrificed my
whole life for my husband, and my children. Now I feel stuck.”
I listened to each of them.
The elderly lady needed empathy and recognition for
helping her niece. My regular client needed me to tell her
PHOTO COURTESY OF L’ITINÉRAIRE
that it was not too late to take care of her own needs instead
of those of others. While the young woman in the hijab
simply needed to be told a compliment.
Active listening, for me, is listening without intervening.
Just listening. I try to understand the other person’s inner
world, show real empathy, and then give the person time
to tell their story. Also, it’s always good to validate with the
person to make sure that I have understood. Maybe the
person doesn’t need you to help them solve their problems,
maybe they just need an ear. Genuine listening gives
importance and value to people who need to talk, and even
more to the person who is too often silent. ■
Courtesy of L’Itinéraire / International Network of Street Papers
@DenverVOICE
February 2023 DENVER VOICE 5
Drop-offs are accepted Monday through Friday,
9 a.m. - 1 p.m., or by appointment.
NEW ITEMS NEEDED:
Socks
Toiletries (individual or travel-size)
Toothpaste, deodorant, chapstick
Bottled water
GENTLY-USED ITEMS NEEDED:
Men’s shoes or boots (sizes 8-12)
Men’s jackets/shorts (sizes L, XL, XXL)
Women’s jackets/shorts (sizes M, L, XL)
Backpacks, carrier bags
USB-C charging cables
WINTER DONATIONS
MADE EASY
During the winter, Denver VOICE vendors
experience increased heating and housing
costs. Meanwhile, their income decreases
because cold temperatures means less
foot traffic and fewer paper sales.
If you would like to help out your vendor
by donating a few extra dollars, scan the
QR code below to make a payment through
Venmo. Please be sure to write your
vendor’s name in the comments. Thank you!
WINTER
WISH LIST
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CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
NOT A NOBODY
GILES CLASEN
ONE LOOK AT NAILHEAD AND IT IS CLEAR HE HAS A STORY TO TELL.
His nose has a notch missing brought on by injury.
“It’s interesting because no one ever asked me about it
before,” Nailhead said.
He speculated that no one asks because the wound makes
him look intimidating.
The injury was retribution for a disagreement he had with
a group of homeless individuals he’d encountered. The group
had set up camp in a park and put up a chain as a barrier to
keep others out. Nudged by his friend, Nailhead approached
the group and told them to remove the chain for safety
reasons. According to Nailhead, he delivered the message in a
way that violated a community code and was punished for it.
“I got hit with a skateboard, something we call ‘truck
fucked,’” he said. “When you get hit with a skateboard, both
the wheels land in your eyes, and the truck busts your nose
up. It’s a pretty substantial blow. It is to serve somebody a
punishment in my culture.”
The homeless community lives by a certain code that has
to be learned, Nailhead said. Violating the code and the
community’s trust can lead to violence as retribution.
“The hit sheared off seven teeth and fractured my sinus
CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
cavity,” Nailhead said. “The most painful part was shearing
my teeth off because the roots stay in your gum.”
He now keeps mostly to himself while moving in and out
of different communities living on the streets. According to
6 DENVER VOICE February 2023
׉	 7cassandra://S4k7G3rIf8VjgEWjHcwHoydc249nX4k9xwQfBYcFL28'7` c\,\ƕ׉ECOMMUNITY PROFILE
DONATE
YOUR CAR!
Need to get rid of your car,
truck, or motorcycle? Consider
donating it to Denver VOICE.
Call (855) 500-7433, or go to:
careasy.org/nonprofi t/denver-voice.
Your donation helps Denver
VOICE succeed in its mission to
provide individuals experiencing
homelessness or poverty the
chance towards a more stable life.
CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
Nailhead, he is known as someone you don’t mess with, but
also someone who can be trusted to share what he has.
Nailhead maintains a small camp in an alley where he
has lived for nearly four years. Occasionally, he is forced to
move by the police, but he always returns after a few days.
The camp consists of a heavy wool blanket draped over
a small gap in the foundation and fencing of an apartment
building. Inside the lean-to, the floor is covered with more
blankets, a few supplies, and a sleeping bag.
“I think my camp isn’t as threatening and is better to my
[housed] neighbors because I don’t have a tent,” Nailhead
said. “There are no stakes in the ground. The stakes mean a
lot. If you drive a stake into the ground it is symbolically like
you’re putting down roots, something permanent.”
Nailhead keeps the alley clean and picks up any nails or
glass to protect tires. He believes this simple act helps him
maintain a good relationship with his housed neighbors.
“The best relationship is when they don’t think about me
until they take the trash out and see me. And they don’t
think about me again until they take the trash out again.”
Nailhead said.
Nailhead considers weather to be the greatest threat to him.
The recent cold has been difficult for him to navigate.
“The only way to legit stay alive out here is to burn a fire,”
Nailhead said.
Not just any fire will do, though. As Nailhead explained,
it has to be a slow-burning fire that creates a lot of heat and
little smoke. He has developed his own way of creating fuel
for his fires. Dry cardboard is Nailhead’s fuel of choice. He
tears it into strips and then soaks each strip in a mixture of
wax and Sterno fuel. If he can’t get Sterno heaters, he relies
on lighter fluid. Nailhead always keeps his fires inside some
type of fireproof container and off the street.
When it becomes dangerously cold, Nailhead goes to the
Aurora Day Resource Center. He travels from downtown Denver
to Aurora because he feels the ADRC treats people kindly.
“[The ADRC] is there only to provide you with a place to
be warm and alive. They’re not trying to push anything on
you,” Nailhead said.
Nailhead first became homeless after leaving his life on
the East Coast, where he had developed a drug and alcohol
addiction. He said if he didn’t leave his old life, he would
die of alcohol poisoning or a cocaine overdose. He figured
if he gave up his job as an electrician he wouldn’t be able
to afford the drugs and alcohol that threatened his life. He
wasn’t sure why he chose Denver, but he believes his poverty
and homelessness saved his life.
So far, his strategy is working. He drinks very little today,
compared to when he was a working electrician, and he no
longer uses hard drugs like crack cocaine. He mostly uses
alcohol or drugs to endure the hardships of living on the street,
but he no longer feels he needs drugs or alcohol in the same way.
Getting off the streets hasn’t been easy. Nailhead isn’t sure
if he is ready to start trying to get an apartment or other
more permanent housing. He knows eventually, the time
will come when his body can’t endure the changing weather
and other threats.
Nailhead has been arrested a handful of times for being in
various parks after hours and for sitting or lying down in the
public right of way near the 16th Street Mall. These arrests
may make it harder for him to find housing when he is ready.
He knows people may not understand why he continues
to live on the street, and he said it is hard to explain.
“I’m a nobody,” Nailhead said. “But out here I’m kind
of not a nobody. I am kind of respected. You can’t find
that everywhere.” ■
The Denver VOICE empowers
homeless, impoverished, and
transient individuals by creating
job opportunities through our
vendor program. We 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.
VOLUNTEER
WITH US!
We are looking for volunteers to
support our program coordination
by helping with paper distribution
and basic offi ce administration
at the Denver VOICE offi ce (989
Santa Fe Dr.) from 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.
If you are interested and would like
to know more, contact us at:
program@denvervoice.org
February 2023 DENVER VOICE 7
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PAYING
TRIBUTE TO
DENVER VOICE
VENDOR BRIAN
AUGUSTINE
Denver VOICE vendors share
their memories of Brian
BREEZ
I will personally miss Brian Augustine so much. He was a force
of positivity in my experience here in Denver. Brian saw that I
was and have been going through many trials and tribulations
and took it upon himself to pull me aside and encourage me
to replace my mental dialogue with positive reinforcement. He
encouraged me and lifted me up so that instead of just focusing
on the negative, to see the positive happening all around me
every day. His words were, “There’s more to your days than
what you’re focusing on in these trying times. Open your eyes
to the good that’s happening.”
I will always remember this, Brian. Thank you!
RAELENE JOHNSON
Brian did so much for everyone. He volunteered at the VOICE
office and would help out by doing chores that vendors do to
get incentive papers. Brian didn’t take the incentive papers and
would say to give them to other vendors who needed more sales.
REA BROWN
It is with great sadness that I speak on the unfortunate event to wit
that I have been so fortunate.
While I could use my pen to spin words that blend,
with memories symphonically accomplishing a tapestry,
so wonderfully woven that one would wish to ponder “what if,”
before they drift.
But today, I will speak plainly as a friend.
Brian was one of the first vendors that I met, whom I
remember for his professionalism.
Every day, at the same time, like clockwork, you knew who
Brian was.
He had a hat or a shirt for every holiday. He was always highspirited
while working.
He had a system for buying and vending papers that he used
every month he could until COVID.
In the office, on the other hand – at least from where I stood –
it appeared that Brian was trying to be the greatest vendor.
As best as he could, he volunteered for a long time, helped
unload the paper delivery trucks; wrote for the paper more
than any other vendor I know, participated in all the programs
the VOICE offered, showed up for fundraisers, special events,
special issues, etc. I even believe he served on the board at
one time.
Brian wasn’t perfect. Brian had problems. One day I
ILLUSTRATION BY BREEZ
remember trying to help Brian find an answer to his housing
problems, which got worse when his rent nearly doubled some
years ago.
8 DENVER VOICE February 2023
׉	 7cassandra://hAaHrmvv1npEQLlxH8ThJqsBYPWr6O78vVPLUIzVwV05` c\,\ƕ׉E@VOICES OF OUR COMMUNITY
It seemed to have been a downward spiral since then. With
relationship problems, in and out of the hospital, one thing
after the other to weaken his heightened spirit, until finally, it
happened, and he was back to being homeless.
Of course, there were many things that could’ve been done
to prevent his passing. And while people tried to help Brian,
myself included, it remains evident that the help he needed was
companionship, financial support, or both.
It’s hard to think that one act of kindness might have kept
Brian alive, even if, but for a little while longer.
And not only Brian but Dwayne and many others. They
didn’t do drugs but tried to help humanity, maybe made a few
unprofitable decisions, but nothing warranting an early grave.
All Brian needed was a place to stay, even if for a little while
until he could find a place he could afford with the money he
was making. But there was no couch that would welcome Brian
or temporary stay he could go to. Brian’s friends were few. They
were people who either worked at the VOICE or people who he
sold the VOICE to.
I hope this dark untimely event shines a light on what more
we all could have done,
and what we can do in the future.
JOHN ALEXANDER
My name is John Alexander, and I have been with the VOICE
for more than 15 years. I have known Brian Augustine since
that very first day with the VOICE. Throughout these many
years, I have only seen Brian’s love for his work, and the way
the life he enjoyed with the Denver VOICE grew more each day
than the day before.
Brian never, never, never spoke in disgust about anyone or
anything – not even when the weather was bad. His kind words
and actions made Brian Augustine who he was. Goodbye,
Brian Augustine, and may God continue to give you peace and
many blessings.
JACOB MARSH, SR.
Brian was a good man, a great friend, and an awesome vendor.
Brian was a very compassionate guy. If you were down on your
luck or having a bad day, he always knew knew what to say to
cheer you up and get out of the slump or to make you feel better
when you’d received bad news. He was a very funny guy, and
everyone knew it. I watched Brian in his good years and his bad.
Even though his final couple of years were some of the worst, he
always managed to look at the positive side of things.
Brian was one of my mentors. When I started with the
VOICE, Brian took time to teach a greenhorn like me to vend
the VOICE properly. I had the privilege of getting to know
him, and understanding what was important to him. He once
told me that other than this job, which he loved, he loved his
family, but he loved his vendor family just as much. He also
told me his favorite part of this job was meeting new people.
Brian loved his job when he was able and feeling well enough
to get out. He tried his hardest to get the VOICE and our
voices as vendors out to the public for everyone to see what we
do here at the Denver VOICE.
Brian was a very caring man that loved everyone and
everything in life. He had a very big heart and cared for
everyone – even if they didn’t care for him. I never considered
Brian to be a violent man. I don’t think he had a violent bone in
his body.
Brian, you were my friend and brother. You will be missed
dearly. Rest in Paradise. ■
If you or someone you know is in crisis, call 988 to reach the
Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. You can also call the National Suicide
Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255, text HOME to 741741 or
visit SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources for additional resources.
This tribute continues on page 10.
February 2023 DENVER VOICE 9
BACK ON THE STREETS
BY BRIAN AUGUSTINE
Editor’s Note: This is the final installment of Brian
Augustine’s “Back on the Streets.” I was so fortunate
to have had the opportunity to get to know Brian. He
was proud of this column. His stories were harsh
sometimes, but to give readers a true sense of
reality, he refused to soften how he described his
experiences. I loved working with him on his column,
and I will be forever grateful to him for trusting me to
help tell his story.
THEY SAY THAT THERE ARE THREE BASIC NEEDS TO LIVE – water,
food, and shelter – but, there is also is a fourth. Some may
supplement drugs and/or alcohol, which may get you
through life. But, that’s definitely not living a real life.
Love is a necessity to live a real life. Human contact.
Like a handshake or, better, a hug. Love gets you
through the days.
The first love most receive is from their mom – even
with an adoption. Mom loves you first.
Then, hopefully, Dad, followed by siblings. Parents,
brothers, and sisters are a great source of love. After
that, it’s aunts and uncles, but let’s not forget about
cousins. This should be the base for love in your life.
That isn’t true in my case. My family just doesn’t find a
use for me.
After family, there is that first love, which some call
puppy love. Friends are another good source of “small”
love. Then, there are the great loves. Some say you’re only
allowed three great loves in one life. I’ve had my three. I
know they were great loves because no matter what they
did, or what I did to them, the love was still there.
Right now, I’m living without any significant love. My
mother passed away, and my family doesn’t contact me
at all, even if I contact them. I have no girlfriend, even
though I’ve tried and searched for one. The only love I
receive is from those who are my friends.
Friends tend to only say they love you when you say
it first. I will continue to go through life, still searching
for that next love. And I will always have the hope of
finding one.
Being homeless, it is hard to find love. We tend to do
things that hurt our chances. Usually, drugs or alcohol
separate us from the ones we love. For me, it is just
being homeless and poor.
I went through the pandemic without hugs or
handshakes. It was hard but I made it through it. Now,
I’m on a forced shutdown due to having a cold and
dealing with poor health conditions, which means for
three or four months, I will not have my friends with
me. But I continue to strive forward. Still hoping to find
that intimate love.
Make sure you tell the ones you love that all you have
for them is love.
I’m sorry if
I made you sad.
I
just hope you
understand this is something I had to get off my chest.
It being February and all. ■
ORIGINAL DESIGN BY BRIAN AUGUSTINE
FOR 2020’S WRAPPING PAPER ISSUE
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 
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THROUGH BRIAN’S EYES
In the summer of 2017, a handful of Denver VOICE
vendors participated in a photography workshop led
by Dave Thatcher of Picture Me Here. After learning
how to frame a shot and tell a story with an image,
the vendors received a free disposable camera and
the opportunity to publish photos in our August 2017
issue. Brian Augustine’s photos are centered around
two areas where he spent much of his time: the South
Pearl Street Farmers Market and the 16th Street Mall.
CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
SOUTH PEARL STREET FARMERS MARKET
“This is the end of the farmers market, and the end
of my day. When it’s over I do traffic control.”
BRIAN’S MORNING VENDING SPOT
“Start of the workday. It just struck me as a
really good picture, the lighting and everything.
It felt like the start of a good day.”
16TH STREET MALL
“It was a peaceful morning. It gets so busy down there
that sometimes you don’t recognize the beauty.”
SOUTH PEARL STREET FARMERS MARKET
“All the people at the South Pearl Street
Farmers Market are friendly.”
16TH AND CURTIS STREETS, LOOKING UP AT
INDEPENDENCE PLAZA BUILDING
“The reflection of the clock tower in this building reminded
me of mechanical monkeys you see in the movies.”
10 DENVER VOICE February 2023
׉	 7cassandra://cMbBfIiHbr5gcXNTQkMl22QZFRKnuyh1LTT_idRYImE&` c\,\ƕ׉ENATIONAL STORY
40 YEARS OF
HOMELESSNESS
IN AMERICA
BY PAUL BODEN
Paul Boden, executive director of the Western Regional Advocacy
Project, writing from the perspective of having experienced
homelessness at a young age, outlines the history of social
disinvestment in the country since the ‘80’s.
FORTY YEARS AGO, the federal government slashed affordable
housing budgets of the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) and the United States Department
of Agriculture (USDA), marking the beginning of the
contemporary crisis of homelessness. It has become political
fodder for local politicians to say they will end homelessness
“in this city” with complete disregard for the fact that no one
city created homelessness, and none will end it on their own.
To understand why national
rates of homelessness
skyrocketed in the 1980s, we must ask: what systemic factors
changed in the late 1970s and early 1980s to allow so many
people to fall through the social safety net and end up living
and dying on our streets? What has been happening over the
last 500 years to result in Black and Indigenous people being
disproportionately represented in the houseless population,
and hit hardest by criminalization? Homelessness is a direct
result of the decisions and funding priorities of the federal
government, in a larger context of white supremacy, settler
colonialism, and neoliberalism. If the federal government
(LEFT) MAYOR AND HOUSING DIRECTOR OF NYC IN 1936, ARTWORK FUNDED BY WPA FEDERAL PUBLIC HOUSING ADMINISTRATION CREATED 1937
(RIGHT) ART HAZELWOOD AND WRAP 2022 OVERTHROW OF NEOLIBERAL GOVERNANCE – FREAKING SOON :)
had chosen to support affordable housing, health care,
anti-poverty wages and programs, worker’s protections,
and quality education—rather than war, tax breaks for the
wealthy, and corporate welfare—mass homelessness would
not exist in our nation.
In 1983, the Reagan administration tasked the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) with directing
a national solution to the rising number of people
without homes. FEMA, the federal agency responsible
for disaster relief, did what they always do, which was
to create thousands of short-term, emergency shelters.
Given the economic downturn of the 1980s, popular
sentiment was that the crisis would self-correct in
time. But by 1987, the passage of the McKinneyVento
Homeless Assistance Act marked the first
federal legislation devoted solely to “managing” the
epidemic of homelessness that was growing across
the nation. As real affordable housing programs were
being defunded by the federal government, funding
for shelter programs grew exponentially. For four
decades, homeless shelters that were meant to be a
temporary solution to a temporary problem remained
the primary response, along with criminalization, to
people sleeping en masse in the streets. This ain’t no
temporary problem, and the Federal Government
never honestly thought it would be.
Historical context is critical to understanding who is
hardest hit by 40 years of social disinvestment. Ongoing
systems of white supremacy and settler colonialism that
affect everything from housing to healthcare, education
to transportation, and especially the criminal (in)
justice system, mean that homelessness and its myriad
related traumas disproportionately impact people along
intersectional lines of race, gender, sexuality, disability,
immigration, and so on. This is no accident.
It
is exactly across
these intersectional
lines of
difference that so many of us have joined forces in
working for meaningful and deep change, building
on ongoing fights for prison abolition, racial justice,
disability justice, and countless other struggles. In 2005,
for example, several groups organizing in the western
ROONIE GODMAN, (2020)... REST IN POWER BROTHER
U.S. came together to create the Western Regional Advocacy
Project (WRAP) and across the country, other community
groups are doing the same thing all fighting to give life to
the realities of people with firsthand experience of these
oppressive systems and to push for dignified solutions. We
are continuing the fight to combat carceral shelters, end the
criminalization of racialized poverty, stop the sweeps, and
fight for actual housing, healthcare, education, and dignity
that all human beings deserve. True community organizing
brings allied local groups together to find common threads
and strategize paths forward, mobilize legal resources
for members, creates artwork and shared messaging,
connects communities through coordinated direct actions,
research and so much more. Seek out these groups and
expand the Human Rights framework of dignity and respect
for people as not a charity issue, it is the least we should
demand and expect of our government.
After 40 years, the system is still doing exactly what it
was designed to do: manage and minimize the presence
of homeless people. It was NEVER intended to address
homelessness in any real way. I was here 40 years ago,
and I’m still here today. The bunk beds and crash pads
that FEMA funded weren’t implemented to create a new
category of housing status for members of a community but
that’s exactly what it has done. After 40 years of inhumane
abject failure, it is past time to recognize “managing visible
homelessness” isn’t a solution to shit. Homelessness is just a
more visible manifestation of a society lacking in justice, not
just the injustice of homelessness.
Our organizing and public education must continue to
build on the realities of all oppressed people so we lift our
connection to each other and our power together! ■
The Western Regional Advocacy Project combines street
outreach, movement building, and national policy work to
help bridge local-national divisions that have hampered
homeless advocacy and seeks to expose and eliminate the root
causes of civil and human rights abuses of people experiencing
poverty and homelessness in communities.
Courtesy of the International Network of Street Papers
February 2023 DENVER VOICE 11
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I CAN’T BELIEVE IT’S
BEEN 50 YEARS AGO
BY RAELENE JOHNSON, VOICE VENDOR
WHEN I WAS 16, I was in so much pain, I tried to commit suicide. I
felt so bad and had no one to talk to, so I took a combination of
sedatives and painkillers. After swallowing them, I ran from my
parents’ house and through the woods nearby, so that I couldn’t
be found. I just wanted to die. When they went looking for me,
my sister pointed out the direction that she thought I would take.
By the time they found me, most of the pills had already
dissolved in my bloodstream, and my stomach had to be
pumped. (To this day, I have not gotten over that feeling of
having my stomach pumped.)
After that, I was committed to a psychiatric ward for 10
months. And back then, mental health care was not good. The
hospital didn’t know how to handle someone with all of my
problems, so they released me.
I had to suffer for so many years because no one would even
look at me to help me. But deep down inside, I knew I could not
attempt suicide again.
RAELENE JOHNSON. CREDIT: CORTNEY TABERNA
It has been 50 years since then, and I’m glad I survived and
was brought back to life. If I had died, I wouldn’t have had my
children or nine grandkids. I also wouldn’t have my eight great
grandbabies. (My ninth great grandchild will be born towards
the end of February!)
I thank God today I’m alive! If you are in pain and life is hard
for you, GO GET HELP!!! Today there are so many different
ways to find the help you need. Once you take your life, it’s over.
Problems seem bigger than they really are. I’m here to tell you I
love life today. It took me so long to get here, but I have to keep
asking for help until you get it. You are worth LOVE – both selflove
and the love of others!
Once you get past your pain, you can be a light for others.
That is the reason we go through pain, cause once we overcome
it, we can help others. PLEASE GET HELP if you need it! You
can’t come back from death, and you may miss out on the joy
that living brings – once you ask for help and receive it. ■
WE NEED FUNDING FOR BETTER
MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAMS
BY LANDO ALLEN, VOICE VENDOR
IN 2004, CONGRESS PASSED A BILL to give tax breaks to the rich,
which were paid for by funds that had been used for mental
health programs. At that time, I was trying to get back to
working as a nurse’s aide. It was a career that I enjoyed and
spent years doing.
When the Democrats took control of the House, they took
away that tax break, but the bill didn’t include funds for mental
health care like before.
I remember the first time I was homeless. I was in Atlanta
and met this guy from my hometown. After talking to him, I
thought he was pretty cool.
I ended up going to Tampa Bay to find work. I was gone a
year then came back to see the guy in Atlanta. But he wasn’t the
same person, and he had obviously lost his mind. I knew that
people can [lose their minds] on the streets, and I wished then
that there were places for him to go to find help because he was
such a cool guy.
LANDO ALLEN. CREDIT: JESSE BORRELL
After a year or two, I was going through my own mental
health crisis. I had a daughter, but I had lost touch with her
mother and didn’t know where my child was. I was sitting
in a motel, watching my friend, as he was going through an
illness that caused his death. I woke up to a phone call from his
employer telling me that he had to be at work. When I passed
my friend the phone, I saw that he was no longer alive. That
was a blow to me. I didn’t know that my friend was so sick. I
think he wanted to die.
I know there are times I have felt the same way, so, when I
got to Denver, I found a place to go to for my mental health. But
I thought to myself, how many cities don’t have resources for
mental health? Can you imagine how many tragedies could’ve
been avoided across America if we had access to better mental
health resources country-wide? Well, after all these years, and
with all I’ve shared here, I believe that we need to ask Congress
for funding for better mental health programs. ■
12 DENVER VOICE February 2023
׉	 7cassandra://RVaqeqeIo-vxv02MPVhc8E7rLEiJ8bSMkq9-vMATYdA#` c\,\ƕ׉EEVENTS
LAUGHS AT LUCI’S
National touring comedians and the best local talent descend into Luci’s Shambles & Provisions
for a luscious and lovely night of laughter hosted by Jeff Stonic of DeadRoom Comedy.
WHEN: Feb 1, Feb 8, Feb 15, Feb 22, 7:30 p.m. doors; 8 p.m. show
COST: Free, but a two-item minimum is strongly suggested.
WHERE: Luci’s Shambles & Provisions, 1553 Platte St.
INFO: deadroomcomedy.com
THE DEATH OF NAPOLEON:
A PLAY IN LESS THAN THREE ACTS
Napoleon Bonaparte spends the last years of his life in exile on an island playing solitaire,
arguing with insects, and refusing to get on his teeter-totter in this new comedy by
Buntport Theater.
WHEN: Various dates from Feb 3 – Feb 18.
COST: Name your own price.
WHERE: Buntport Theater, 717 Lipan St.
INFO: buntport.com
ACROSS
LUNAR NEW YEAR PARTY FOR KIDS
Celebrate the Lunar New Year! Make Lunar New Year decorations and crafts while enjoying
traditional light refreshments. All ages up to 12 are welcome.
WHEN: Feb 5, 4 p.m. – 5 p.m.
COST: Free
WHERE: Denver Public Library: Central Library, 10 W. 14th Ave. Pkwy.
INFO: denverlibrary.org/events
FREE DAY AT THE DENVER ART MUSEUM
Enjoy a free day at the museum! Advance ticket reservations are encouraged.
WHEN: Feb 14, 10 a.m. – 9 p.m.
COST: Free
WHERE: Denver Art Museum, 100 W. 14th Ave. Pkwy.
INFO: denverartmuseum.org
FREAK TRAIN
Held the last Monday of each month, Freak Train has remained Denver’s most unique live
entertainment experience for more than 20 years. The fi rst 12 people to sign-up get 5 minutes
to do anything they want on stage (well, just about anything). It might be the best 5 minutes of
your life; it might be the worst. Either way, there’s free beer!
WHEN: Feb 27, 8 p.m.
COST: $5
WHERE: Bug Theatre, 3654 Navajo St.
INFO: bugtheatre.org
1. Minute Maid drinks
5. Recipe amts.
9. Charged particle
12. British ___ (group
of landmasses in the
North Atlantic)
14. One with contacts,
maybe
16. Bird word
17. Calligraphy tool
19. Choose
20. Congenital
21. Abridge
23. Relieves (of)
25. Founder of Carthage
(or, in more recent
times, British singer
of “Here with Me”)
26. Brand mentioned
by the Beatles in
“Come Together”
30. Small incisions
33. Classic card game
34. Start of a refrain
36. Black piano key
37. Cylindrical building
39. TV control: Abbr.
40. Harvard rival
41. Th ere’s one on almost
all of Weird Al
Yankovic’s albums
43. A Stooge
46. Band performance
47. Wolfs (down)
49. Mexican salamanders
51. Only US president who
was also chief justice
52. Opposite of sans
53. Judgment Day hymn
title that translates
to “day of wrath”
57. Driver’s lic., e.g.
61. Mr. Potato Head piece
62. Like Wyoming
64. Baptist leader?
65. Taj ___
66. “All My Children” vixen
67. Indian lentil dish
68. MacLachlan of
“Twin Peaks”
69. One-dish meal
DOWN
1. LP player
2. “Help ___ the way!”
3. Association
4. Lady of Spain
5. “Ew, I didn’t want
to know that!”
6. Harmony
7. Fuzz
8. Shells out
9. Counterculturist
10. “My bad!”
11. Written reminder
13. Unbending
15. What a spoiler
might spoil
18. Choice words
22. Instruct
24. Poles, e.g.
26. Th resholds
27. Vegetable that
may be red, green,
white, or yellow
28. Security for a loan
29. Hello or goodbye
31. Superman’s birth name
32. “Keep it in” marks
35. Amazon assistant
38. Gumbo vegetables
42. Ratify
44. “___ Out” (Billy
Joel song)
45. Swear
48. Run of luck
50. Comes to pass
53. Not working
54. Collection: Suffi x
55. Hurting
56. And others, for short
58. Came down to earth
59. Dash
60. Attraction
63. Ginger ___
COURTESY OF
DEBORAH LASTOWKA
PUZZLES
COURTESY OF STREETROOTS
ANSWERS ARE ON PAGE 15
February 2023 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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 	G̄9ׁH  http://liverhealthconnection.orgׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ	 ̒9ׁHmailto:info@hepc-connection.orgׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ ҁ̢9ׁH $http://harmreductionactioncenter.orgׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ 9ׁH 8https://drugrehabus.org/rehabs/treatment/medicaid/unitedׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ ]X9ׁHhttp://denverhealth.orgׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ 7f9ׁH 0http://careercenteroffices.com/center/231/denverׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ `l9ׁHhttp://denverlibrary.org/ctcׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ 7I9ׁHhttp://voacolorado.org/gethelpׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ K9ׁHhttp://lovedenver.orgׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ 7̸9ׁH )http://seniorsupportservices.org/programsׁׁЈנc\,\Ɩ  7dR9ׁHhttp://soallmayeat.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ V*k9ׁHhttp://saintpauldenver.comׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ  D9ׁHhttp://sfcdenver.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ 7n9ׁHhttp://stelizabethdenver.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ f9ׁHhttp://stpeterandmary.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ fn9ׁHhttp://odmdenver.org/homeׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ j̲9ׁH &http://jordanamedenver.churchfoyer.comׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ Qi9ׁHhttp://holyghostchurch.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ p8k9ׁHhttp://hislovefellowship.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ b9ׁHhttp://krishnadenver.comׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ (̤9ׁH $http://facebook.com/ThePeoplesPicnicׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ 8݁9ׁH +http://feedingdenvershungry.org/events.htmlׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ 2̆9ׁHhttp://frwoodyshavenofhope.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ 7̀9ׁHhttp://denverrescuemission.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ -`*9ׁHhttp://dicp.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ ,6X9ׁHhttp://mealsforpoor.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ J9ׁHhttp://citysquare.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ 7^9ׁHhttp://christinthecity.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ ʁN9ׁHhttp://christsbody.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ 7h9ׁHhttp://denvercathedral.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ vX9ׁHhttp://mealsforpoor.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ ]̝9ׁH %http://capitolheightspresbyterian.orgׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ ̹9ׁHmailto:EDITOR@DENVERVOICE.ORGׁׁЈנc\,\ƕ uR9ׁHhttp://DENVERVOICE.ORG/RESOURCEׁׁЈ׉E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
SELF-SUFFICIENCY THROUGH EARNING A
DIGNIFIED INCOME. YOUR GIFT MAKES A WORLD
OF DIFFERENCE FOR THESE INDIVIDUALS. HERE,
WE LIST THOSE WHO HAVE GIVEN $500 AND MORE
IN THE LAST YEAR. DENVERVOICE.ORG/DONATE
$25,000+
The NextFifty Initiative
$10,000+
Rose Community Foundation
Max and Elaine Appel
The Christian Foundation
Acorn Hill Foundation Inc.
$5,000 - $9,999
Bank of America Charitable Foundation
Francis Trainer and Trainer Family
Sustainable Housing and Development Foundation
$1,000-$4,999
Katherine Standiford
Walker Family Foundation
Jill Haug
Whole Foods Foundation
Russell Peterson
Pivotal Energy Partners USA, Inc.
Meek-Cuneo Family Fund
Chris and Susan Pappas
Michael Dino
Sidney B and Caleb F Gates Fund
Frederic K Conover Trust
Megan Arellano
Keyrenter Property Management Denver
The Credit Union of Colorado Foundation
Jana and Jim Cuneo
Kroger
Paul Manoogian
Lori Holland
Gaspar Terrana
Warren and Betty Kuehner
Maggie Holben
Matthew Seashore
Michael J. Fehn and Jan Monnier
Jim Ashe
Courage and Community Foundation
George Lichter Family Foundation
Lisa Wagner
Joshua Kauer
Elsbeth Williams
$500-$999
John Gibson
Fire on the Mountain
Christopher Boulanger
Sheryl Parker
Laura Saunders
Robert E and Anne T Sneed Family Foundation
Barbara and Robert Ells
Carol and Louis Irwin
Donald Weaver
Edwina Salazar
James Stegman
Jennifer Stedron
Jeremy Anderson
Stephen Saul
WalMart
Peter Iannuzzi
Nikki Lawson
ABOVE THE FOLD: $5,000
• 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
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
CAUSE, AND YOUR GIFT IS 100% TAX-DEDUCTIBLE!
GALLEY: $2,500
• One complimentary half page ad 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 ($50 value)
• Business logo highlighted on website homepage, and in the Fly Sheet Sponsorship list
• Logo highlighted in our annual report, along with logo in quarterly support feature of the paper
14 DENVER VOICE February 2023
׉	 7cassandra://wDzCPwqt0KXL9dq9W3rZjkxqE65nso4hqx2b6fJv_y8!2` c\,\ƕ׉E$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. CLARE’S MINISTRY AT ST. PETER AND ST. MARY 126 W. 2nd Ave., dinner at 4pm on Tues. Also offer a change of
clothes, toiletries and sleeping bags when available. 303-722-8781 stpeterandmary.org
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
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.a-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
DRUG REHAB USA Addiction hotline: 866-716-0142. Organizations that take Medicaid:
https://drugrehabus.org/rehabs/treatment/medicaid/united-states/colorado/denver
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, 1700 N Wheeling St., Aurora 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
February 2023 DENVER VOICE 15
DON’T LOOK NOW!
PUZZLES ARE ON PAGE 13
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