׉?ׁB!בCט d du׉׉	 7cassandra://mvc848L5PxHJuwY2VDVpA0214hs0gIYjKezPo7uYXoA ٍ`׉	 7cassandra://nIfdTs_5B4uBcpKtN8dr-TPGdQrQwHwin9ENsuPJHnQͅ`p׉	 7cassandra://1ZnnbhvcAu_iDBgPt2qemUtMJ_IsRKmUO96nhmj5Up00h` i4BeQMW׈Ei4BeQMW׉E APRIL 2026 | Vol. 31 Issue 4
PAINT
THE TOWN
BRIGHT
BRIGHT SPACE
MURALS
BRINGS LIGHT
TO DENVER
COMMUNITIES
P. 12
PREVENTING
HOUSING
LOSS
THROUGH
SELFSUFFICENCY
P.7
HARM
REDUCTION:
ACTION
OVER
IDEOLOGY
P.8
$2
SUGGESTED
FROM
YOUR VENDOR:
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Help us help your neighbors.
We're
Right
Here.
Learn more about our work and the people we serve: denvervoice.org
DENVERVOICE.org
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Editor
Seeds of Hope
F
OR APRIL’S Ask a Vendor question, we asked what
vendors would grow if they had a garden. It’s a simple
question, but one rooted in hope.
When someone is experiencing housing instability,
it is difficult enough to think about where they’ll spend the
next night, let alone what they would plant in a garden. Yet
most Denver VOICE vendors can still picture how they
would use a resource, even if they’re not sure they’ll ever have
it. That ability to imagine something beyond uncertainty is
one of the strongest signs of resilience I see in our vendors.
Every day that the VOICE office is open, vendors line up
to buy their papers and plan for how they will spend the next
week or so, selling papers to earn enough money to pay for
basics like food, shelter, medicine, or clothing.
The way our vendors continue to show up, regardless of
weather, traffic, or other obstacles, is a powerful reminder
that hope is not about certainty. Instead, hope – especially
in this context – isn’t abstract, but rather, it grows with the
determination to keep pushing forward and to imagine a
future where a garden, whether literal or otherwise, might
still be possible.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
VENDOR PROGRAM
ADVERTISING
MAILING ADDRESS
VENDOR OFFICE
OFFICE HOURS
Elisabeth Monaghan
was born and raised
in Denver, joining the
VOICE as managing
editor in 2019. She is
passionate about social
justice, and believes
that writing and creative
expression are some of
our most powerful tools in
combating homelessness
and poverty.
DENVERVOICE.ORG
MANAGING EDITOR
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
ART DIRECTOR
ADMIN. ASSISTANT
VOLUNTEER COPY EDITORS
ARTISTS/PHOTOGRAPHERS
CONTRIBUTORS
@denverVOICE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Elisabeth Monaghan
Giles Clasen
Andrew Fraieli
Maddie Egerton
Jennifer Forker
Aaron Sullivan
Joshua Abeyta
Giles Clasen
Joshua Abeyta
Rea Brown
Ethan Clark
Giles Clasen
Robert Davis
Andrew Fraieli
Raelene Johnson
Jerry Rosen
Jennifer Forker, President
Isabella Colletti, Secretary
Michael Burkley
Edwin Rapp
Donald Burnes
Ande Sailer
Linda Shapley
Steve Baker
Lisa Schlichtman
editor@denvervoice.org
program@denvervoice.org
(720) 320-2155
editor@denvervoice.org
PO Box 1931, Denver
CO 80201
989 Santa Fe Drive
Denver CO 80204
Wednesdays, 10am-1pm
- Elisabeth Monaghan
Managing Editor
Since 1996, the Denver VOICE has served individuals
experiencing housing or financial instability by providing lowbarrier
income opportunities. In the time since our inception,
we have put more than 4,600 vendors to work, selling the
paper throughout the Denver metro area.
By focusing on poverty, housing, social justice, local arts
and entertainment, and the human experience behind
the headlines, we tell the stories that Denver media often
overlooks. An award-winning publication, the Denver VOICE
is a member of the International Network of Street Papers and
the Colorado Press Association, and we adhere to the Society
of Professional Journalists’ code of ethics.
TO HELP, YOU CAN:
GET THE WORD OUT:
VOLUNTEER:
ADVERTISE:
DONATE @
denvervoice.org @denverVOICE
Contact program@denvervoice.org
Contact ads@denvervoice.org
SUBSCRIBE @ denvervoice.org/subscriptions
THE COVER: One of many murals in Denver painted by
Andreas Kremer and Reina Luna of Bright Space Murals.
PHOTO BY GILES CLASEN
DENVER VOICE
APRIL 2026
3
ABOUT US
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Q&A WITH DENVER CITY
COUNCIL MEMBER SARAH
PARADY ON WORKERS'
RIGHTS
By Andrew Fraieli
THE DENVER VOICE SPOKE WITH at-large Councilmember Sarah
Parady about workers’ rights in Colorado and Denver, some
of which are complicated, others that some residents may be
unaware of.
This dialogue has been edited for length and clarity.
ANDREW FRAIELI: Could you tell me a bit about your legal career
and your specific background with workers’ rights?
SARAH PARADY: I owned a small law firm for about 10 years —
before I ran for council — that represented mostly low-wage
workers. We did some civil rights work, but our practice areas
included discrimination, wage theft, and various kinds of
retaliation. We would represent whistleblowers.
Of course, there’s a distinction between employment law
and labor law, so I wasn’t doing anything involving labor —
like union organizing — but we would sometimes get cases
that involved employees being individually retaliated against,
punished, or fired, for having been involved in that kind of
work. My clients were employees, not unions, in other words.
I got the chance to get involved in a lot of state legislation
on these kinds of topics, too, because it’s been something that
Colorado law has really shifted on in the last, I don’t know, 10
years. For example, I was involved with a lot of the big bills that
have passed really big changes at the state level, particularly the
Denver City Council At-Large
Member Sarah Parady | Photo
courtesy of City of Denver
Colorado Equal Pay for Equal Work Act. I was one of the people
that kind of conceptualized that and drafted and advocated for
the legislature and with the sponsors. I’m pretty proud of that
one.
AF: My next question was going to be how that carried into your
work as a council member, so I’ll just check that off the list.
SP: Well, that was state legislation before [I was on] Council
actually, I was still an attorney. On Council, we put the right
for city workers to unionize on the ballot, and it passed, which
is a change to the city charter. Our workers never had the right
to bargain collectively and now they do — other than the safety
workers, which have had that or have had that right for a long
time.
And, I think, my first bill on Council was giving the city
auditor the ability to issue subpoenas to companies that they’re
investigating for wage theft so that they can get information.
A lot of the city wage ordinances are still relatively new and
have evolved a lot in recent years. We’re just always finding little
pieces that kind of need improvement, right?
AF: What do you see as the most important right for workers to
be aware of that they often don’t know?
SP: So, I taught just one semester of like, employment law
4
COMMUNITY PROFILE
׉	 7cassandra://y1eulgbdBtisWm7d4exkd7JDZlu81q2lUPy_DMOLmbI` i4BeQMW׉E%101, at CU Law School as an adjunct right before I came to the
Council. It’s really fun. And I would ask my students on the first
day of class for an example of some time when they thought
maybe their rights as a worker had been violated, even if they
weren’t sure.
I wish I could just ask everyone this question because they
always have an answer, and what you hear about is a lot of wage
theft. Often problems with tipped wages not being calculated
or distributed correctly, but people are not being paid their full
wage that they should be one way or another — sometimes off
the clock work. People are being told, ‘Well, you have to clock
out and then fill out paperwork’ or something.
And then, people are often misclassified. It’s pretty
common for people to be told, ‘Well, we’re going to make you
a contractor,’ when actually that’s not just at the discretion of
the company or the employer — there’s a legal test for whether
someone can be a contractor. If you’re supposed to be a worker
[with] paid wages, then you’re entitled to overtime, minimum
wage, all these things that you’re not as a contractor.
That’s not just a matter of discussion: Some people are
employees whether the company wants them to be or not. It
depends on a bunch of factors, including whether that’s their
main source of income and whether they’re genuinely kind of
a free agent that could go do a bunch of other jobs, or whether
this really is kind of like their job and it’s controlling their time.
AF: And these are specifically things people often don’t realize?
SP: Yeah. I think the reason is that a lot of times where you see
wage problems happening is when there is complexity, and so
often people working in kind of new industries will see a lot of
wage violations. When the marijuana industry was growing in
Colorado, I had many, many employees in that industry coming
in with their wages not being paid correctly because employers
don’t know how to do compliance, or maybe they think that
they’re doing some kind of new economic model, or the law
doesn’t apply to them. That happens a lot with app-mediated
work — so gig work.
Those companies will often say, ‘Well, we’re just so different
that the law must not apply to us.’ And then the other big one is
that people are often confused by, or not aware of, what kind of
rights you have when you become sick or disabled. Those two
things can overlap.
Disabled is a legal term; sick is not. There’s a lot of layers of
laws that might give you rights to accommodation, rights to
certain kinds of leave, but the definitions are different under
every one of these laws. And so, you end up looking and
thinking, ‘How do I navigate asking for maybe some time off as
a disability accommodation because I need time to get better?’
Or time off as a family medical leave thing under federal law
and under state law.
I think people really often don’t take advantage of everything
that’s available to them when they’re sick or caring for a sick
family member or have given birth.
AF: I imagine there’s also the aspect of people maybe either not
realizing, or not knowing, they have a right to some kind of
retaliation against that as well.
SP: Yes, and it’s actually quite case by case — whether you’re
raising some kind of concern at work and the concern makes
your boss angry, and you end up getting fired or disciplined —
whether or not you could have a legal claim from that.
There’s literally hundreds of city, state, and federal laws that
try to protect different kinds of complaints or issues that an
employee might raise. So, anytime you pass a discrimination
law, you’re probably going to also say that if you complain about
something that you perceive as discrimination, and you get
retaliated against, that’s also illegal.
If you raise a concern about environmental contamination at
work, there may be statutes that say that that’s protected, but
usually the statute is really about something else and it puts the
evaluation thing in to try to protect other people. It’s very hard
as an employee to know, even if you feel like what you’re doing
is kind of advocating for something important, or in the public
interest or protective of yourself and other workers, whether
that’s protected from retaliation. It can be different by industry
or different depending whether you’re a public or private
employee.
AF: I was just about to ask if there’s a difference in these rights
for public compared to private employees.
SP: Huge differences. Public employment is so different that
I would always recommend that public employees make
sure they’re talking to an attorney who knows about public
employment, because there are many, many, many statutes and
ordinances in both directions.
Sometimes they’re more protective of public employees,
sometimes less so, but that’s just extremely common across
the board. One of my favorite little known areas — within the
context of the National Labor Relations Act — is the private
sector law that set out most employees’ right to unionize. And
there’s some exceptions in it, but for most private companies,
that’s where the right to unionize lives.
It also has one provision that applies even to employees who
are not yet in a unionized workplace, but are at an employer
that’s otherwise covered, called Section 7 of the NLRA.
Basically, again, for most private sector companies, if you are
joining together with other workers in some way to talk about
your working conditions — that could even mean, you know,
my friend was sexually harassed and I went in with her to the
boss’s office to bring it up — that Protected Concerted Activity
is protected even for a workplace that isn’t actually unionized.
That’s meant to protect people’s ability to start moving in
that direction of unionization and kind of mutual support, but
people don’t know that one, and it’s a good one to think about
where strength is in numbers.
AF: One of the other differentiations I wanted to ask about
was the difference of rights for a worker who has been fired
compared to laid off.
SP: Well, those aren’t technical terms, but there are some
differences. There are specific protections for if a company
wants to have a layoff or reduction in force and they’re saying
that this is not because of merit, like a mass layoff. There are
certain laws that come in and protect workers, particularly from
age discrimination, in that process because there’s a tendency to
use layoffs sometimes to get rid of older workers.
But mostly, the question is really just what the employer’s
real motivation was, and so it doesn’t matter so much if the
employer is saying, ‘I’m firing you for individual misconduct,’
or, ‘Gosh, we’re having a layoff, and we’re letting go 20 people
and you happen to be one of them.’ In either case, the same laws
are going to protect you. If the real reason wasn’t a legal reason
— the real reason was discriminatory, retaliatory in an illegal
way — then you’re going to be protected no matter what the
reason was that the employer gave.
AF: My last question: What workers’ rights do you think are
weak and need to be improved?
SP: One of the biggest ones goes back to public sector employees
in the 2000s sometime, when Anthony Scalia was still on the
Supreme Court. Before he passed away, he wrote an opinion
that absolutely gutted what had been the First Amendment
protections of public employees.
In the Garcetti v. Ceballos case, he found — and a majority
of the court joined him — that public employees are only
protected from retaliation for their speech if the speech that
they engaged in was unrelated to their job. So if you go to work
and you say, ‘Oh, I’m voting for such and such,’ you can’t be
retaliated against for that.
Or, if you say, ‘Gosh, I really have some opinions about this
street painting project,’ and you don’t work in street painting,
you’re protected for that. But, if you try to blow the whistle on
something that is part of your work — which, if you think about
it, that’s obviously what we want public employees to do — you
are not protected by the First Amendment under this decision.
And I won’t even begin to explain the reasoning behind that.
At any rate, that’s the law of the land. Since then, a lot
of jurisdictions, I think, have been slow in replacing that
protection for our public employees because it had been a
matter of constitutional law. You kind of have these piecemeal
protections of different kinds of speech.
Having passed something that protects city workers using
one aspect of the First Amendment — engaging in organization
rights — I think we’re probably due to consider passing
something that protects city employees if they are engaging
in speech or whistleblowing, even if it’s related to their duties.
Because again, it’s in the public interest for them to do that, in
my view.
SPRING
Wishlist
Drop-offs are accepted Wednesdays,
10 a.m.-1 p.m., or by appointment.
GENTLY-USED ITEMS NEEDED:
• Men’s shoes or boots (sizes 8-12)
• Men’s jackets (sizes L, XL, XXL)
• Women’s jackets (sizes M, L, XL)
• Backpacks, carrier bags
• Sleeping bags
• USB-C charging cables
NEW ITEMS NEEDED:
• Socks
• Toiletries (individual or travel-size)
• Baseball caps
• Chapstick, sunscreen
• Hand warmers
If you would like to help out a specific
vendor by donating a few extra dollars, scan
the QR code to make a payment through
Venmo. Please be sure to write your vendor’s
name in the comments. Thank you!
@DenverVOICE
DENVER VOICE
APRIL 2026
5
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LOPEZ
CREATING SOUND,
MAKING A
DIFFERENCE
Armando Lopez, aka Mondosax, makes music to
connect us to the natural world. | Photo by Kyle Awalt
ARMANDO LOPEZ does not move
through the world in just one lane.
By day, he works in lithium-ion
JOSHUA ABEYTA
CO-FOUNDER OF
LOS MOCOCHETES
battery research and hazardous
materials administration, helping
develop technology tied to the
transition away from fossil fuels.
By night, he is one of Denver’s
most recognizable horn players,
a longtime member of Brothers
of Brass, and a fixture in projects
that stretch from jazz fusion to DJdriven
“sax trap.” Along the way,
he has also become deeply involved
in social justice organizing.
For Lopez, those worlds are not separate.
“I think in the sense that that music is the expression of our
humanity,” he said. “I think it is a gear shift [to move between
science and music] in the sense of the way using your right and
left hand feels different. But at the end of the day, you’re still
shaping clay.”
As a member of Brothers of Brass, Lopez has been helping
cast the band’s joyful chaos over Denver audiences for more
than a decade. If music fans have spent time in Downtown
Denver over the past 11 years, chances are, they have heard
them.
The band posts up outside venues such as Ball Arena and
the Denver Center for the Performing Arts during let-out,
serenading fans as they spill into the streets and parking lots,
drawing crowds who bop along to their New Orleans-style
renditions of pop songs and traditional second-line numbers.
Their latest album, “Street Life, Vol. 2,” recently debuted at
a packed release show at Cervantes’ Other Side. Lopez pulled
double duty, performing an opening set with his jazz-fusion
project, “Something Out Of.”
“Street Life, Vol. 2” is a follow-up to the group’s debut, “Street
Life, Vol. 1,” which was released in 2021. Lopez provided all of
the saxophone parts and contributed further with lyrics and
composition.
The new album opens with “Teddy’s Jam,” a high-energy
banger that evokes Bourbon Street on Fat Tuesday, with tight
horn arrangements, an infectious backbeat, and a clear sense of
the band’s collective chemistry.
Lopez’s sax work is provocative, cutting-edge, and his tone
is uniquely his own. Brothers of Brass is an ecstatic experience,
and their new album captures the live performance energy that
can be difficult to replicate in a studio setting. Lopez’s other
projects push further outward.
He performs as Mondosax, a DJ and saxophone solo project
that he laughingly describes as “a wish.com Big Gigantic.” The
project blends live saxophone with dance music and has made
him a popular presence on the wedding circuit, even if, as he
puts it, the work is “very lucrative, but not very artistically
fulfilling in any way.”
Most recently, Lopez has been building a new project around
an instrument rarely seen on local
stages:
the contrabass
clarinet.
“That instrument is so rare, and people just don’t see it,” he
said. “No one’s ever gonna call me for a contrabass clarinet gig,
so I have to build a band around it, essentially.”
The new project, Terra Ohm, reflects the same duality that
runs through much of Lopez’s life. The name references both
electrical resistance and something more meditative and
earthbound. The music, he said, will combine live electronics,
samples, trap- and EDM-inspired drums, world percussion,
and the Afro-Latin influences that keep finding their way into
his work.
That blend of technical precision and spiritual searching also
shows up in his day job.
Lopez spent 5 years as a materials scientist before moving
into hazardous materials administration, where he does
research and development on lithium-ion batteries. Lopez’s
work on power storage places him at the forefront of one of the
biggest technical challenges in the shift away from fossil fuels.
Science did not pull him away from music. It deepened his
commitment to it.
“When I started learning chemistry, especially material
science, it was so epic,” Lopez said. “The crystal structures, the
way waves and physics move through, the way sound and heat
are really the same thing. It was very profound.”
Lopez, the son of immigrants, said part of his path into
science came from a desire to honor the sacrifices his parents
made.
“There was always kind of this pressure that a lot of firstgeneration
immigrants have,” he said, “that you have to be kind
of something super epic to make all that sacrifice worth it.”
Over time, he came to see music, science, and activism less
as competing paths than as different ways of trying to shape the
world.
“Taking that excitement for the natural world and passion
and desire to change the world and kind of honing it into
something that’s actually effective,” he said, “music is a huge
piece of that.”
Lopez cites his education as what pushed him into art and
science.
“I was fortunate enough to come up in an environment where
I got a really amazing public school education in Los Angeles
and North Hollywood and in the Valley,” he said.
Having music and science in his life has helped Lopez find
balance.
“If one avenue of my life is taking too much out of me, I have
this whole other piece that I can engage with,” he said.
That same drive has also led him into organizing. Lopez
serves on the board of the Denver Justice Project, an
organization that does policy advocacy and community
education for criminal justice reform. His social justice work
became infused with his music when Brothers of Brass began
joining the resurgent protest movement in the wake of George
Floyd’s murder by Derek Chauvin in 2020.
The band regularly showed up to help usher marches and fill
demonstrations with a sense of joy and connection. They also
partnered with No Enemies, the community-driven initiative
that teaches protest songs and chants and was co-founded
by members of Flobots, the Denver-based band that went
international with their 2007 hit “Handlebars.”
Looking ahead, Lopez said organizing live events remains
one of the clearest ways to keep marrying music and movement
work.
For him, the point is not just to perform or do research. It is
to be useful, grow, and change.
“You’re still just moving and trying to have an impact on the
world,” he said.
6
MUSIC IN DENVER
׉	 7cassandra://9TyfgM-XW2NYyGewP-c_od_m_yxk_ExuTPOZEaLishE&#` i4BeQMW׉ESHANNON PATRICK STRUGGLED to find affordable housing for several
years after she left an abusive relationship.
Like some single mothers, she held several jobs, ranging from
teaching assistant at Gateway Montessori to working in medical
centers and nursing homes, but she never earned enough to make
ends meet. As the cost of living continued to increase across Boulder
County, Patrick and her children found themselves couch-surfing
with church friends.
“I felt like a bad mom because I had my kiddos and wasn’t able to
provide everything that they needed,” Patrick told Denver VOICE.
But all of that began to change when Patrick, 33, was accepted into
Boulder County’s Family Self-Sufficiency (FSS) program. The U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) created a
national FSS program in 1990, although Boulder County started its
own FSS program in 1988 under the name “Project Self-Sufficiency.”
FSS is a free, five-year, academic, employment, and savings
incentive program designed to help low-income households
receiving public benefits improve their family’s financial situation.
The program has become a critical lifeline for families on the
verge of experiencing homelessness at a time when the cost of living
in Colorado is rising sharply. According to the latest snapshot data,
Colorado saw a 134% increase in homelessness among families with
children between 2023 and 2024, which was the largest increase in
the nation.
Alicia Sheflin Thompson, who oversees the FSS program at the
Boulder County Housing Department, told Denver VOICE that the
program is designed to be flexible to serve each participant’s needs.
There are classes available in behavioral health, career development,
financial literacy, and various other subjects.
Participants benefit from living in affordable housing while
they’re enrolled, Thompson added. They don’t pay more than 30%
of their income in rent and have regular access to social workers
who can connect them with additional benefits, like food stamps or
welfare.
Additionally, participants can save money in an escrow account.
The total savings are based on HUD’s FSS standards for income and
voucher payments. Graduates average $8,260 in savings over the
five-year program, according to Boulder County data.
Patrick keeps in touch with one individual, who graduated from
the program with $40,000 in savings. Seeing the impact FSS has had
on others inspired Patrick to continue her journey, she said.
In 2025, 36 people graduated from Boulder County’s FSS
program, collectively saving more than $478,000 toward their
education, employment, and housing goals, according to data from
Boulder County.
One graduate became a homeowner, and 12 graduates completed
college or career training. Several others used their savings to pay
down debt.
“It can really make a huge difference in a short period of time,”
Thompson said.
One of the biggest impacts the program had on her life was being
PREVENTING
HOMELESSNESS
THROUGH FAMILY
SELF-SUFFICIENCY
By Robert Davis
Shannon Patrick and her children pose
in front of a pumpkin patch. | Photo
courtesy of Shannon Patrick
connected with her case manager, said Patrick. That relationship
helped her navigate the COVID-19 pandemic, which began shortly
after she enrolled. The regular check-ins with her case manager also
helped her return to school, which had been a long-time goal.
At the beginning of the program, Patrick finished her bachelor’s
degree in psychology from Colorado Christian University. By the
end, she had obtained her master’s degree in applied behavioral
analysis from Arizona State University. She now works at Trail Ridge
Middle School as a registered behavior technician, a role in which
she provides hands-on support to autistic students, and says she
loves every minute of it.
Stories like Patrick’s are a testament to the strength of the FSS
How a more than three-decade-old program in Boulder County
is helping keep families out of shelters and off the streets.
program. The program has funding to operate through 2026, but
funding for 2027 is unknown; the Trump administration has moved
to reduce federal funding for similar service programs.
Thompson has heard rumblings that Congress will approve
funding for the program, but for now, nothing has been confirmed.
On March 12, the U.S. Senate passed the 21st Century ROAD Act,
which increased funding for HUD’s FSS program. However, the
bill could face pushback in the House of Representatives because
it includes a provision prohibiting institutional investors from
purchasing more than 350 homes.
“The cost of living across Colorado has made it very challenging
to find affordable, safe housing,” Thompson said. “So, for families
who want to make a major change in their life, this is one of the few
programs that will give them something for multiple years where
they’ve got the stability, they’ve got the reduced rent, and they’ve got
the support.”
DENVER VOICE
FEATURE
7
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REDUCTION:
ACTION OVER
IDEOLOGY
Story and Photos by Giles Clasen
Ruth Kanatser is called the unsung
hero of the Harm Reduction Action
Center community.
RUTH KANATSER’S MORNING ROUTINE began well before dawn.
Kanatser and her husband climbed out of their car at 3:30 most
mornings, racing to the methadone clinic, then to the day labor
dispatch before the best jobs were gone. Some days included 14
hours of hard labor before they searched for a safe place to park,
get a few hours of sleep, then start all over.
That was Denver for those experiencing homelessness in the
early 2000s.
Most days, Kanatser and her husband made just enough
money to survive, never enough to get ahead. Complicating
their efforts was a nagging need for heroin.
During those years, Kanatser depended on methadone to
overcome withdrawal symptoms from heroin. Both the drug
and the solution felt like a trap.
TRYING TO STAY OUT OF WITHDRAWAL
“When you’re using, you’re very quickly no longer getting
high,” Kanatser said. “You start using just to avoid getting sick
from withdrawal. The street-level heroin user, the person really
struggling on a day-to-day basis, is just trying to stay out of
withdrawal, to stay out of the hospital. Methadone can help, but
it brings its own problems.”
Kanatser said that relying on methadone to overcome
addiction was expensive and came with so many restrictions
that working and earning her way out of homelessness was
difficult.
“It’s not that it doesn’t help, it does, but the system under
which it is administered is so overly parental, and just very
gross,” Kanatser said. “When you take methadone, the clinic is
in your life, you have no privacy, and they set the rules on when
you come, when you go. It can be restrictive in a way that makes
regular day-to-day life, like work and family, nearly impossible.”
On a good day, Kanatser and her husband would walk away
from their temporary jobs with $80 between them.
Keeping the methadone prescription current also cost
money, a lot of money. And it had to be paid before anything
else, because it was the only thing that guaranteed they could
work the next day. They also set aside $35 each day for a dirty
hotel on Colfax. If they had any money remaining, they bought
food. Frequently, they went without.
“It was stressful all the time,” Kanatser said. “You never felt
safe. Ever. Never ever.”
For nearly four years, they turned to hotel rooms when they
could scrape together enough. They slept in their car when they
couldn’t.
A proper apartment would have cost significantly less than
hotels each month, but getting into one required a payment up
front for first and last month’s rent plus a security deposit. It was
a threshold that kept moving just out of reach.
“We would always save up, get close to having a deposit, then
something would go wrong, an emergency, and we were back
to square one,” Kanatser said. “It was ridiculous, no matter
how hard we worked or how hard we tried, we couldn’t move
forward for years.”
Having a car helped. It meant they could drive other day
laborers to work sites for a few extra dollars, and get to the
casino jobs up in the mountains, which paid better than
anything in the city. But living in an old car without money to
maintain it is like counting on a time bomb that could undo all
of their hard work.
When the cable connecting the gas pedal to the engine
snapped one night, stranding them miles from a safe place to
sleep, they walked to buy the part and fixed it themselves in the
dark with flashlights.
“My poor husband was on the ground underneath, and I’m in
the car upside down in the dark with flashlights trying to thread
this thing through,” she said. “I think we were there for I don’t
know how many hours. Just desperate. But we didn’t have any
other option. We didn’t have the money to get the car repaired,
and it was our home. We had no choice. That was desperation.”
NOT A LOT OF MONEY, BUT EVERYTHING
What finally broke the cycle wasn’t discipline or
determination alone. Her husband’s parents gave them the cash
to secure an apartment.
“It was $436. I remember that to this day,” she said. “It’s not a
lot of money. But it was everything.”
Most people, she said, never find their $436 and never
overcome homelessness or addiction, often dying on the street.
Today, Kanatser is the assistant director of the Harm
Reduction Action Center (HRAC), a Denver-based
organization that provides clean syringes, naloxone, fentanyl
test strips, safer use supplies, and a range of support services
to people who use drugs. Most importantly, HRAC offers the
services without judgment.
Kanatser said getting her first job with what would
become the Harm Reduction Action Center was a matter of
timing, exposure, and luck. Before she ever applied, she had
encountered early harm reduction work through Urban Links
and Denver Health’s REACH program. Those programs were
the first places, she said, where anyone in healthcare saw past
her substance use and treated her as if her life mattered.
“It was also the first place where anybody treated me like a
human being,” she said. “Anybody said anything I had to say was
valuable whatsoever, and that was mind-blowing.”
When a part-time outreach position opened at HRAC years
ago, Kanatser nearly did not apply. She was unemployed,
depressed, and convinced that more qualified people would get
the job.
“I almost didn’t even interview for it,” she said.
Kanatser’s mother pushed her to go to practice interviewing,
if nothing else. She got the job, starting with 20 hours a week
doing street outreach, and has been a fixture in Denver ever
since.
PROVIDING SERVICE WITHOUT JUDGEMENT
The Harm Reduction Action Center emphasizes substance
use awareness, focusing on fact-based education, safety, and
dignity. HRAC does not require individuals to pursue sobriety.
Instead, the organization focuses on safety, and if a person
wants to find treatment, the organization helps.
Since 2002, the Denver nonprofit has provided syringe
access, naloxone, health education, and a consistent point of
contact for people navigating drug use, homelessness, and an
increasingly toxic drug supply.
For nearly 25 years, Kanatser has been sharing the
organization’s philosophy, rooted in reducing the negative
consequences of drug use rather than insisting that a person
stop using before they deserve care, support, or safety.
Lisa Raville, the center’s executive director, said harm
reduction is both practical and familiar, even if the term
remains politically charged.
“We use harm reduction in everything we do every day. Seat
8
COMMUNITY FEATURE
׉	 7cassandra://UDkCoND3mFeOCyZ8STS1v6J7iqsMtFBSoHs0v0NrSQ0$` i4BeQMW׉E&belts, designated drivers … if you go out on a boat, you wear a
life preserver. Hopefully you’re not in an accident, hopefully the
boat doesn’t capsize, but if it does, you have that life preserver,
that seat belt to offset the risk. That’s all harm reduction,”
Raville said. “Life is inherently risky. What I like about harm
reduction is it’s a true action item you can do today.”
According to Raville, syringe access programs allow people
to properly dispose of used syringes and obtain sterile ones,
reducing transmission of HIV and hepatitis C.
HRAC also hands out safer use kits that help reduce some of
the most serious dangers associated with drug use by providing
sterile supplies, overdose reversal medication, and basic health
items that can prevent infection, disease transmission, and
death.
BEYOND INDIVIDUAL HEALTH
In 2012, HRAC began safe needle distribution and disposal.
At the time, the Colorado Department of Public Health and
Environment reported that Denver County counted 533 active
hepatitis C cases in state surveillance data. By 2022, the county
recorded 281 new chronic hepatitis C diagnoses. The categories
changed over time, so the comparison is not exact. Still, the
overall picture is clear. Denver’s hepatitis C burden is lower now
than it was when HRAC’s syringe access work began.
The organization also works to put naloxone in the hands
of those most likely to witness an overdose. Narcan, the brand
name for naloxone, is a medication that temporarily reverses an
opioid overdose.
“People who use drugs are the true first responders in
this overdose crisis; they need access to naloxone first and
foremost,” Raville said.
Raville argued that harm reduction’s importance extends
beyond individual health. She said it also improves public safety
and responds to a crisis that punishment has failed to solve.
“We get more referrals to our program from the Denver
Police Department than we do from all of the hospitals
combined. Police participation shows harm reduction increases
public safety right here in our community,” Raville said.
Kanatser said that the relatively low cost of harm reduction
saves Denver millions in public health costs.
According to Kanatser, the need has only become more
urgent as overdose deaths continue to hit Denver’s unhoused
community. Elected officials have, in her view, swung the
pendulum back toward criminalization and incarceration.
“Nobody will talk to anybody about drugs, what works,
what keeps people alive. They will never tell the truth about it.
Politicians like to focus on ‘Just say no.’ They like to blame the
individual. Arrests look like action. But arrests make substance
use more dangerous and more difficult to overcome,” Kanatser
said.
She said that if a person is afraid of an arrest, they are less
likely to call for help or ask for help. It drives substance use
underground.
Raville said the Harm Reduction Action Center is often
criticized for not pushing people into treatment, but she
argues that criticism ignores both the limits of the treatment
system and the realities people face while living outside. She
said HRAC does not oppose recovery, but rejects the idea that
treatment should be forced or treated as the only valid response
to drug use.
“If you’re such a big treatment fan, nobody’s stopping you
from trying to get people into treatment. But not everybody is
ready for treatment or can afford treatment,” Ravile said. “We’re
doing something positive, healthier, and safer today.”
Raville said treatment is often difficult to access and very
expensive. Many programs also fail to help individuals seeking
help because they do not use an evidence-based approach.
“If you believe the end goal is drug treatment, you have to
start with harm reduction. We keep people alive. You can’t seek
treatment if you’re dead,” Raville said.
FACING LAYERED THREATS
According to Raville, pushing people into treatment without
housing or support afterward can set them up for relapse and
greater danger. Many people face a heightened risk of overdose
after treatment because
their
tolerance has dropped and
their bodies are no longer accustomed to the substances they
previously used.
Dr. Sarah Axelrath, a primary care and addiction medicine
physician with the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless, said
the realities often push individuals to rely on substance use
to cope with trauma. Treating addiction without addressing
housing and other basic needs sets individuals up for failure.
Through Stout Street Health Center’s clinics and street
medicine teams, Axelrath cares for people living outdoors
across Denver. She said the threats they face are layered,
physical, medical, and social, and that those pressures often
compound one another. Trauma can deepen the instability
of homelessness, she said, while fear and exhaustion can also
shape the way people use drugs.
“Substance use as a cause of homelessness is not even in the
top three,” she said. “The top causes are housing instability,
unaffordability, and unemployment.”
Once people become homeless, Axelrath said, substance use
can become a response to the conditions of survival outside.
“Many people who are homeless did not use meth before they
became homeless,” Axelrath said. “They end up using meth
during homelessness because they are trying to stay awake at
night so they can be safe and not feel so vulnerable.”
That kind of survival strategy, she said, can become a
punishing cycle.
“There’s nowhere safe for them to sleep during the day,” she
said. “So sometimes they use opiates to come down and try to
get a little sleep. If they can’t, they use more meth to stay awake,
and they get trapped in this cycle of profound sleep deprivation
and escalating substance use.”
THE UNSUNG HERO
Axelrath said she admires the dedication Kanatser has shown
to the unhoused community and those who use substances.
“It takes a special person to do what Ruth has done for so
many people, for such a long time,” Axelrath said.
Raville said the center’s work is especially critical for people
living outside, where lack of sleep, constant displacement,
and daily crises can intensify drug use and overdose risk. In
that environment, she said, the organization offers more than
supplies. It offers consistency.
“Harm reduction’s here, we’ve always been here, we’ll always
be here, we’ve ebbed and flowed for years on people loving us
and hating us, but the only constant has been we’ve been here,
and we’re a home for thousands, keeping people alive.”
Inside that work, Ravile said, Kanatser has become
inseparable from the organization itself.
“Ruth is the harm reduction action center. We all work for
Ruth, Babe,” Raville said.
Raville said
Kanatser’s ability to connect and care for
individuals is what makes her uniquely successful.
“Ruth definitely understands drug use, she understands
health education, she understands the systems in which we
work. She is able to engage with the methadone clinics, the jails,
the legal system, so she’s been such a great advocate for people
for so many years. Ruth is the unsung hero. She doesn’t do much
outside of here because she’s so busy inside of here.”
Liz, who has experienced homelessness in Denver on and off
for 20 years, considers Knatser a steady and nurturing presence
in a system that often feels chaotic and impersonal.
“Ruth, she’s like our mom, or like Wendy from Peter Pan,”
Liz said. “She is always there with the Lost Boys, making sure
they’re safe no matter the challenge.”
Liz described Kanatser as someone who takes care of people
while still meeting them as equals. But more importantly,
Kanatser is consistent in her care for those who need help.
Liz said Kanatser did more than offer kindness. She said that
Kanatser helped her find safer ways to survive when she was
using. Kanatser was also instrumental in persuading Liz to seek
treatment for hepatitis C.
“There were lots of reasons I avoided treatment, but maybe
more than any, I didn’t feel like I deserved help,” Liz said. “Ruth
called bullshit on that.”
After Liz missed doses during treatment, Kanatser pushed
Liz to continue and get healthy.
“It was all her, man,” Liz said. “She pep-talked me back up,
and like, she’s like, ‘We’re gonna keep moving forward, it’s going
to work, it’s going to work.’ And it worked. I am still free from
hep C.”
Even when Kanatser challenged her, Liz said she never
doubted her care.
“She always tells me how it is,” Liz said. “But never has she
ever made me feel like I’m not loved.”
$436: ENOUGH TO BRIDGE THE GAP
Kanatser knows how thin the line can be between survival
and catastrophe because she once lived there herself. She has
described heroin as “a tool for survival” during a difficult period
of her life. She remembers sleeping in cars, grinding through
day labor, and spending years trapped in motels because she
and her husband could never quite save enough to get into an
apartment.
What changed her life, she said, was not some sudden moral
awakening, drug treatment, or bootstraps transformation. It
was the gift of $436, enough to finally bridge the gap and get her
housed.
That memory has never left her. Too many of the people she
sees at HRAC, she said, are still waiting on their own version
of that chance, still living in the space where one emergency,
one arrest, one missed work shift, or one bad batch can end
everything.
“I feel like what I do is invaluable,” Kanatser said. “And I feel
like as long as I can, as long as they’ll let me, that it’s important
to protect those who are even more vulnerable, right? Who have
even less opportunity than I did.”
Voluneers assemble safe use kits for distribution to HRAC’s clients.
DENVER VOICE
APRIL 2026
9
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בCט   du׉׉	 7cassandra://BrjwUUPQFvUdUdrkgSWE_ln9PYDgOUbwNr3CnogbZvw <~`׉	 7cassandra://xwAJDYxtMfoGjx85TDzkloA-CLZbvQxClsS1Ge8Wn48N)`p׉	 7cassandra://LbX88I7_30_FCONpMOqN2tbhu1hTAEFsw_itgzz4BUc!` i4GeQMWט d du׉׉	 7cassandra://whHnxZL9wwkFj-Gt-3Z9u2Tnl2XltatbJxyuucrXwzQ b`׉	 7cassandra://WgbXDmq3BJej8Dmr-eRBmbftlgiUCnrlQ93DEZlZI4szo`p׉	 7cassandra://NGYtl8AX6hN_EnWmjxeAI3ACret4L1XPd8X0YygMebU'` i4GeQMWۑנi4HeQMW 	̐9ׁHhttp://goodbonesdenver.comׁׁЈ׉E9When Carson and Melody Allen decided to stencil “Fuck
ICE” onto the foam of a latte, they understood it might
draw attention. They did not expect their East Colfax
coffee shop to receive threats.
10
COMMUNITY PROFILE
WHEN A LATTE
BECOMES A
PROTEST
Story by Amor Flores and
Giles Clasen
Photos by Giles Clasen
׉	 7cassandra://LbX88I7_30_FCONpMOqN2tbhu1hTAEFsw_itgzz4BUc!` i4BeQMW׉EWHEN CARSON AND MELODY ALLEN decided to stencil “Fuck
ICE” onto the foam of a latte, they understood it might draw
attention. They did not expect their East Colfax coffee shop to
receive threats.
“Yesterday, we got a message saying, ‘people get killed for this
stuff,’” Melody said. Still, she said, the intensity of the response
reflects how divided the issue has become.
Melody explained that the recent ICE operations, including
masked raids and the shooting of U.S. citizens in Minnesota,
mark what she sees as an unnecessary and illegal escalation.
“It’s not normal. It’s not,” Carson said. “We shouldn’t pretend
like it’s normal. We shouldn’t behave like it’s normal. We
shouldn’t fall into apathy and just kind of throw our hands up
and go, ‘voting doesn’t matter.’”
The Allens began receiving threats after a prominent rightwing
TikTok account featured the message and the shop. They
took the threats in stride but decided to keep their six-year-old
son away from the shop for a while.
Good Bones opened in November 2025 to be a communal
hub. The Allens built it as a gathering place with live events,
markets, and community meetups.
The decor leans nostalgic, with guitars for sale on one wall,
racks of vintage clothing and shoes lining another, and cassettes
mounted edge-to-edge like wallpaper near the entrance.
In early 2026, immigration enforcement became part of
their business. The couple felt they had to do something after
the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by ICE agents in
Minneapolis.
The idea for a “Fuck ICE” stencil wasn’t a calculated plan to
go viral.
“When we made the stencil, we were just kind of playing
around with content based upon our beliefs for social media,
and then the first day it really popped off, and people were
actually asking for it. We realized we could donate through it,”
Melody said.
For every latte sold with the “Fuck ICE” message, Good Bones
donates $1 to Casa de Paz, a nonprofit that supports immigrants
and asylum seekers released from the ICE detention center in
Aurora.
Good Bones sold 3,000 stenciled lattes in two weeks.
“It’s not about the coffee, it’s not about the donation, it’s about
the message and coming together,” Carson said. “And we’ve seen
lines around the block of people willing to wait an hour and a
half for a coffee with a little cinnamon on top.”
Carson said he believes the majority of Americans are
opposed to ICE and their aggressive tactics, which is why the
“Fuck ICE” latte has generated so much attention.
“It is very black and white,” Melody said. “You’re either for
what they’re doing, or you are absolutely horrified by it and
think it’s wrong and inhumane.”
For the Allens, the issue is tied to personal experience.
Melody is second-generation Mexican American. And both
were devastated when a close friend was deported.
Last year, Melody and Carson accompanied a longtime friend
from Venezuela to an immigration check-in. Check-ins are a
normal part of the asylum or green card process as a case moves
through the courts. The Trump administration has expanded
ICE’s use of these meetings to detain individuals before a final
judicial ruling on the case.
“[Our friend] had been here since he was 11 years old,”
Carson said. “And he didn’t come out of the [detention center].
We watched a massive line of people that were there just for
their yearly check-ins, but were taken. None of them came out.
But we saw van after van leaving the back gated area.”
Their friend’s wife, an American citizen, was left alone
without any way to find, contact, or track him.
“It was absolutely heartbreaking watching the look on his
wife’s face when she walked out without her husband. It was
horrible,” Carson said.
The Allens said that their friend was transferred between
facilities and denied access to important medications. Their
friend’s family had lost contact with him and were unaware of
his whereabouts when his parents saw him getting off a plane in
Venezuela as part of mass deportations.
The experience shaped the Allens’ decision to speak publicly.
“It’s easy to feel like there’s a shit ton of bad people out there,”
Carson said. “But I think there’s far more good people who are
like-minded, care about one another, and really want to see
change within the country.”
According to Carson, the Allen’s goal is to support the
newcomer community, love their neighbors, and encourage
people to speak out against the new deportation and
immigration policies.
“It’s not about money,” Carson said. “It’s about getting the
word out and doing something.”
Good Bones has expanded its
role beyond fundraising.
The shop has hosted after-hours events focused on civic
engagement.
“Our coffee shop is a second home, and we want people to
fill that home with like-minded values and who come from
different walks of life and can connect over this issue a little bit,”
Melody said.
The vision has shaped how they operate the shop, and they
said being neutral isn’t an option because neutrality is an act of
support for ICE’s actions.
“I think right now it’s the time to be the loudest with your
beliefs,” Carson said. “We personally think this is inhumane and
wrong and horrifying. And if you do too, we can all gather here.”
To learn more about Good Bones, visit https://
goodbonesdenver.com.
Good Bones opened in November 2025 to be a communal hub. The Allens built it as a gathering place
with live events, markets, and community meetups.
DENVER VOICE
APRIL 2026
11
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TOWN BRIGHT
Story by Ethan Clark
Local artists at Bright Space Murals bring
community to Denver through art
at Keystone Resort before moving to Denver to work for Never
Summer, a popular snowboard brand.
Reina Luna, who was born and raised in Denver, has been a
massage therapist for over seven years and has had a passion for
art for decades. She and Kremer met through a mutual friend
after the COVID lockdowns ended and the world began to
reopen.
Kremer became interested in painting murals after watching
the YouTube channel Ten Hundred, and his job at Never
Summer offered him the opportunity to paint one of his own.
According to Kremer, he was inspired to paint an ugly,
rusting shipping container outside the Never Summer factory,
wanting to make sure the first thing people entering the factory
saw was more visually appealing. He said that he had never
made anything like this before, but drafted a design to show the
owners — who were impressed — and they gave him the chance
to try.
Kremer said the project was difficult, but turned out to be a
great success and launched his career as a muralist.
Luna, who helped with Kremer’s first mural, was daunted by
the challenge this project presented.
“I was way out of my comfort zone, and I had no idea how we
were going to do this, but [I told him] if you want to do this, I
will help you out,” Luna said. “It turned out really good, and I
ART IS ONE OF THE MOST MEANINGFUL parts of Denver’s identity.
From the various art districts and museums to the sculptures
at the Convention Center, art has defined how people see
Denver almost as much as the mountains that serve as the
city’s backdrop. While most of Denver’s art scene is confined to
specific places that require people to go out of their way to see,
one art form breaks the mold and brings color and life to even
the most unimportant places: murals.
Murals are a unique medium, as they offer a degree of
freedom that other art forms lack. They can be found on the
sides of shops to attract customers, in schools to convey a
warm, welcoming environment to students, and in businesses,
neighborhoods, and communal spaces.
In an interview with Denver VOICE, Denver-based
artists Andreas Kremer and Reina Luna, the co-founders of
Bright Space Murals, discussed how they use art to bring the
community together.
THE ARTISTS BEHIND BRIGHT SPACE MURALS
Andreas Kremer and Reina Luna, who are partners, created
Bright Space Murals to bring art to businesses, schools, or
anyone else interested in enhancing their surroundings.
Kremer, originally from Maryland, moved to Colorado to
pursue his love of snowboarding. He spent a winter working
was really proud of the hard work.”
“These murals are really not for us, they’re for either this
space or this community, or the area where we’re leaving it,”
Kremer said.
“The murals [are] an extension of us to the community,
sharing our own creative effort in a space that’s public for
everyone to enjoy and interpret in your own way,” Luna said.
Since creating their first mural, Kremer and Luna have
Andreas Kremer and Reina Luna,
co-founders of Bright Space
Murals. | Photo by Giles Clasen
12
COMMUNITY PROFILE
׉	 7cassandra://cN4_ssn46tuUlLnzoEDuFL9tjRPWanvckJirrs7r8oU#` i4BeQMW׉Econtinued painting murals for anyone interested in their art. They also host workshops
with local high schools, including George Washington High School and Prep Academy.
During these workshops, students design and make the mural with their guidance.
“The first one we did was super involved,” Kremer said. “We let the kids have full
rein over the designs. We just showed them some of the murals we’ve done, asked them
some questions about what they wanted to represent, what their school means to them,
and then let them find images, come up with a full design, and then, we guide them
throught it.”
MAKING A LIVING OFF OF MURALS
13
One of the biggest issues budding artists come across is getting enough business
to escape the starving artist phase and dedicate themselves to their passion while
financially supporting themselves, an issue Kremer and Luna had to figure out.
After the couple painted their first mural at the Never Summer factory, Kremer
turned to social media to get their names out there. Initially, Kremer opened an
Instagram account and posted ads featuring before-and-after photos of their mural
and other projects. He hoped people would find them and reach out.
Social media alone wasn’t enough to grow their brand, so Kremer reached out to
Influential Walls, a national muralist group. He spoke with Derrik Diza, their founder,
who taught him how to do email outreach so he could contact companies he wanted
to work with, rather than wait for them to contact him. Diza also suggested that since
Kremer had several years of experience teaching kids to skate, he should work with
schools and teach kids how to make murals.
This advice has been incredibly helpful in growing their business.
“All of our jobs have come from direct email outreach,” Kremer said. “Finding
the founders or decision makers, whether it’s principals or marketing directors of
companies, and reaching out to see if they’re interested.”
Kremer said he would advise any artists struggling with turning their art into a
stable business not to lose focus.
“I think a lot of artists feel like they’re not good enough, and I would say, ‘You are
good enough,’” Kremer said. “If you’re making art, you’re good enough, and I think that
holds a lot of people back. When I was at that starving-artist stage, I was posting my
stuff online and going to art shows, hoping people would find me, but the big change
was going out myself and directly finding people I wanted to work with. That opened
up so many more jobs that would not have come my way otherwise. I mean, that’s even
why we’re here talking to you today. We wanted to get our name out there more, so we
started reaching out to different magazines and newspapers.”
HOW TO CREATE A MURAL
Developing a mural can be a lengthy process, taking around six months to a year of
preparation and up to a month to paint.
When a client shows interest in their murals, the first thing they will do is arrange
a meeting to discuss what they want. They will ask them a variety of questions to
understand what message they want, any ideas or subjects they have, and what impact
they want to leave on their audience and the community.
After the interview, Kremer and Luna each come up with their own designs in vastly
different art styles to see in which direction their client wants to go.
“It’s usually a collaboration,” Kremer said. “They like parts of [her design], they like
parts of [my design], and then we come together to make the final product.”
They will then work with their client, making adjustments to their design based on
their feedback until they are satisfied with the result. Following this, they will trace the
design on the wall. Usually, they do this by going out at night with a projector to display
the image onto the wall. They also use doodle grids, a muralist technique in which they
draw doodles all over the wall, acting as anchoring points when tracing the design.
While the painting process may seem simple, many factors can complicate it and
increase development time.
“It really depends on the size of the wall and the conditions of the wall,” Luna said.
“We’ve had walls that we’ve had to come and prep before we could paint, which adds
time, but if everything is perfect, we can take anywhere from a week or two to a month,
depending on how big it is.”
NEXT UP: A MASSIVE WALL PROJECT
Bright Space Murals is currently working on a couple of new projects. They’ve
recently started a new workshop with Prep Academy, working with 10th- and 11thgrade
students to make a mural for a massive 100-foot wall, which is expected to be
completed by the end of the school year in May.
Beyond that, Luna is working on a project that combines her love for art and murals
with her experience as a massage therapist.
“With my massage therapy background, I’m starting to reach out
to different
businesses, and schools [that] would like a mixed collaboration,” she said. “We will be
offering wellness services like massage therapy, yoga, self-care, guided workshops, and
murals.”
Although they’re currently juggling several projects, that doesn’t mean Kremer and
Luna are too busy to work with anyone else who has found interest in their work.
“I think we’re just excited to be able to share what we have to offer to the community,
to businesses, and to schools,” Luna said.
For more information about Bright Space Murals, visit brightspacemurals.com or
follow them on Instagram @brightspacemurals.
ACROSS
1. Family nickname
4. Design detail
8. Overly sentimental
13. -like
14. Arm bones
16. ___ Haute, Ind.
17. This, in Toledo
18. Pope after Sergius II
19. Vicinities
20. *Simulated,
immersive technology
23. Prefix with plasm
24. Year’s record
25. When doubled,
a Gabor sister
27. Mattel’s version
of the Spite and
Malice card game
30. Brunch orders
32. Paid, as the bill
35. Día ___ Muertos
36. What each of
the starred answers
does to itself
38. “It ain’t over till it’s
over” speaker Yogi
40. Oust
41. Scrunch
43. Solicit, as business
47. Businesses: Abbr.
48. Viral infection for
which a vaccine was
first created in 1957
51. Walking stick
52. *”Whatever”
56. “The butler ___”
57. ___ nous (between us)
58. Pull along
59. “It’s so easy, ___
could do it!”
60. Scattered, as seed
61. Future fish
62. Under attack (by)
63. Get rid of
64. Tankard filler
DOWN
1. Paragons of leakiness
2. Has an illness
3. “Little” sound?
4. “Star Trek” navigator
5. Entreaty
6. ___ Gay (W.W.
II plane)
7. Manmade pile of stones
8. It needs a jump
(or a 58-Across)
9. Prefix meaning “gas”
10. Auntie Annie’s
specialty
11. Seeks divine help from
12. Survey choice
15. *Toss-up, to a bookie
21. Peak condition
22. Winnie the Pooh
creator’s initials
26. Stubborn one
28. Words before a meal
29. ___ and aboot
31. Leaves for dinner?
33. *1994 spy movie
starring Arnold
Schwarzenegger and
Jamie Lee Curtis
34. Suffix with Caesar
36. Aggressive campaigns
37. Roadside
bomb, briefly
38. Include invisibly
in an email
39. Wearing down
42. Tel Aviv suburb
44. Meditative phrase
45. Not with it
46. He had a big
adventure in a
1985 movie
49. “Otherwise...”
50. Lesser ___ evils
53. Greedy cry
54. “___ Tu” (1973
Spanish-language
hit song)
55. Roulette bets
56. Cotillion girl
38
41
47
52
56
59
62
53
57
60
63
48
39
42
49
50
54
55
58
61
64
17
20
23
27
32
36
40
43
51
44
45
46
28
29
33
34
37
21
24
30
35
31
18
22
25
26
19
14
15
16
PUZZLES
PUZZLES COURTESY OF STREET WISE
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
DENVER VOICE
APRIL 2026
13
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WHAT WOULD YOU
GROW?
This column is a place for
Denver VOICE vendors to
respond to questions from
fellow vendors, our readers,
and staff.
RAELENE JOHNSON
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
I have a very small
garden that is about
3’ wide and 10’ long.
What I’m most proud
of is my organic
table grapes. All I did
was buy a plant from
the Boulder Farmer’s
Market. After 3 years,
it began growing
grapes. Now, the vine
is about 13 years
old, and it produces
lots of grapes every
year. I also have a
couple of mini rose
bushes. Everything
else seems to die.
I would grow roses,
as they’re a sign
of
spring,
and
everybody loves
roses — especially
for Valentine’s Day
and Mother’s Day.
I would also plant
corn, as I love corn
on the cob. It’s really
good.
JERRY ROSEN
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
REA BROWN
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
This month’s Ask a Vendor question was
suggested by Denver VOICE vendor Lando Allen
If you would like to help out a specific vendor by
donating a few extra dollars, scan the QR code to
make a payment through Venmo. Thank you!
Please be sure to write your vendor’s name in the comments!
If I plant a tree,
what would it be?
Truthfully, you would
think
that
but
would
be easy for me, not
because I’m greedy,
or don’t want to
eat,
everybody
obviously,
the
on
street needs money,
so a MONEY TREE is
probably if not the
first, then in the first
three. But that’s a nobrainer,
so I guess
a brainier answer
would be a tree
that gives you the
capacity to see.
IN YOUR
OWN WORDS
Words from our vendors on their life and
times, what they’re thinking and feelings,
for their neighbors to know and share.
RAELENE JOHNSON
DENVER VOICE VENDOR
Time Is Flying By
WHEN WE WERE YOUNGER,
we thought we had all the
time in the world,
We used to hear people
say, “Enjoy your youth,
because before you know
it, you get old.”
Well, it is true. My inner
true self, who had been
lost to so many years of
pain, found that she’s been
trapped in an old lady’s
body. The aches and pains
come on even faster than
they did when I was younger.
Even today, I can’t believe how fast time is going.
We’re already into April, didn’t have much winter to
speak of, and here we are in spring. My new puppy is
growing so fast – faster than I want her to grow, but
that’s part of life.
Time is too short to hold on to anger or
frustrations over someone’s behavior or something
that they said to you, because when you think of all
those hurtful things people have said over and over, it
keeps that pain alive in yourself!
When you let people rent space in your head, that’s
time wasted, and thinking about that is not doing any
good for you or the person who hurt you. When you
dwell on what someone said or did to you, all you end
up doing is hurting yourself instead of taking time to
treat yourself better or find peace of mind.
Life moves too fast to spend it worrying about
whether or not people like you. If people don’t like
14
you, so what? Not everybody’s going to like you. Why
waste your time on sadness, hurtful things, or people
who don’t care about you?
There’s always going to be somebody that hates
you, and there’s always going to be people that love
you. You just have to choose which one is more
powerful to you, which one’s going to give you more
peace in life. It’s a better use of your time to love
yourself enough to attract people who do care about
you, because we never know when our last moments
on this Earth will be.
If you are a younger person reading this, just know
that time will always pass, whether you want it to or
not, so spend your time with people you enjoy being
around and with things that make you happy. Always
remember to love yourself first and foremost, truly.
Once you love yourself enough to care about
yourself, you won’t have so many people wanting to
hurt you because you’ll know what real love is when
good people show themselves to you. But if you’re in
pain all the time, it’s like you have an invisible neon
light over your head saying, “I’m here to be used and
abused,” and that is a terrible thing to have happen.
Enjoy your life, make the most out of it, and don’t
let anybody steal your joy, your happiness, your love.
Don’t wait until later in life to find self-love, because
that would be sad. I know because it happened to me.
Today, I truly love myself enough not to waste any
more time on things that don’t bring me peace of
mind! I pray that everybody spends their time wisely
and that no one wastes many years in turmoil or pain!
Time is too precious to waste!
׉	 7cassandra://gv3gNMOlX5TVScCUmAoy4eyDx2Al-M-ZAQ-Y-wVisXc-Z` i4BeQMW׉E(RESOURCE LIST
MEDICAL / MENTAL HEALTH / DENTAL
SERVICES
ACS COMMUNITY LIFT: 5045 W. 1st Ave., Denver; https://
rentassistance.org
DENVER HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER: 777 Bannock St.; https://www.
denverhealth.org
DETOX LOCAL: Features information including mental health and
substance use resources specifically for the AAPI (American Asian
and Pacific Islander) community; http://www.detoxlocal.com
DRUG REHAB USA: Addiction hotline - 888-479-0446; Organizations
that take Medicaid: http://www.drugrehabus.org/rehabs/
treatment/medicaid/united-states/colorado/denver
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER: 112 E. 8th Ave.; 303-572-7800;
HIV/Hep C/ Gonorrhea/ Chlamydia testing available. Services are
restricted to active IV Drug Users. Offers clean syringes to active
users, as well as safety training on proper disposal of dirty syringes;
M-F — 9am-12pm: http://www.harmreductionactioncenter.org
INNER CITY HEALTH CENTER: 3800 York St.; Emergency walk-ins - 303296-1767;
Dental — 303-296-4873; M-F - 8am-2pm
LIVER HEALTH CONNECTION: 1325 S. Colorado Blvd.; Suite B302;
Resources and support for those affected by Hep C. Free Hep C
testing offered; 800-522-4372, 800-359-9272; info@hepcconnection.org;
https://www.viventhealth.org
NATIONAL AIDS HOTLINE: 800-342-AIDS/800-344-7432
NATIONAL SUICIDE PREVENTION LIFELINE: Text or call 988; https://
www.988lifeline.org
NATIONAL RUNAWAY SAFELINE: 800-RUNAWAY/800-786-2929; https://
www.1800runaway.org
RAPE ABUSE AND INCEST NATIONAL NETWORK: 800-656-HOPE; https://
www.rainn.org
SALUD CLINIC: 6255 Quebec Pkwy, Commerce City; 303-697-2583,
970-484-0999; https://www.saludclinic.org/commerce-city
STOUT STREET CLINIC: 2130 Stout St.; 303-293-2220; Clinic hours for
new and established patients - M, T, Th, F - 7am-4pm, W - 9am6pm;
https://www.coloradocoalition.org/healthcare
SUBSTANCE ABUSE REHAB GUIDE: HELPLINE — 888-493-4670;
https://www.detoxrehabs.net/states/colorado/
U.S. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE HOTLINE: 800-799-7233 (English and
Spanish); 800-243-7889 (TDD); https://www.thehotline.org
EMERGENCY SHELTER
INDIVIDUALS IN NEED OF SHELTER ARE ENCOURAGED TO GO TO “FRONT
DOOR” SHELTER ACCESS POINTS:
• For individual men — Denver Rescue Mission Lawrence Street
Community Center, 2222 Lawrence St.
• For individual women — Samaritan House, 2301 Lawrence St.
• For youth ages 15-20 — Urban Peak, 1630 S. Acoma St.
• Families in need of shelter should call the Connection Center at
303-295-3366.
ADDITIONALLY, DENVER PARKS AND RECREATION WILL OPEN ALL
CURRENTLY OPERATING RECREATION CENTERS AS DAYTIME WARMING
CENTERS DURING REGULAR BUSINESS HOURS ON FRIDAY, NOV. 8 AND
SATURDAY, NOV. 9, FOR PEOPLE WHO NEED A PLACE TO WARM UP.
Denver Public Library locations are also available during regular
business hours. Double-check library hours: denverlibrary.org/
locations.
For more information about shelter access, visit denvergov.org/
findshelter or text INDOORS to 67283 for updates.
DROP-IN DAYTIME CENTERS
HAVEN OF HOPE: 1101 W. 7th Ave.; 303-607-0855; Mon.-Fri. 7am1pm.
Private showers & bathrooms, laundry, lunch, etc; https://
www.thoh.org
THE GATHERING PLACE: 1535 High St.; 303-321-4198; Mon., Wed.-Fri.
8:30am-5pm, Tues. 8:30am-1:30pm; Daytime drop-in center for
women, their children, and transgender individuals; Meals,
computer lab, phones, food bank, clothing, art programs, GED
tutoring, referrals to other services, etc; https://www.tgpdenver.org
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER: 231 East Colfax; Mon.-Fri. 9am12pm;
303-572-7800; Provides clean syringes, syringe disposal,
harm-reduction counseling, safe materials, Hep C/HIV education,
and health education classes; https://www.
harmreductionactioncenter.org
LAWRENCE STREET COMMUNITY CENTER: 2222 Lawrence St.; 303-2940157;
day facility, laundry, showers, restrooms, access to services
FOR INDIVIDUALS IN DENVER EXPERIENCING
HOMELESSNESS OR FINANCIAL INSTABILITY.
DENVERVOICE.ORG/RESOURCE-LIST
https://www.homelessassistance.us/li/lawrence-street-communitycenter
OPEN
DOOR MINISTRIES: 1567 Marion St.; Mon.-Fri. 7am-5:30pm.
Drop-in center; bathrooms, coffee/tea, snacks, resources, WIFI
https://www.odmdenver.org
T. FRANCIS CENTER: 303-297-1576; 2323 Curtis St. 6am-6pm daily.
Storage for one bag (when space is available). Satellite Clinic hoursMon.,
Tues., Thurs, Fri. 7:30am-3:30pm; Wed. 12:30-4:30pm
https://www.sfcdenver.org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES: 846 E. 18th Ave. For those 60+. TV room,
bus tokens, mental/physical health outreach, and more. https://
www.seniorsupportservices.org
SOX PLACE (YOUTH SERVICES): 2017 Larimer St. Daytime drop-in
shelter for youth 12-30 years old. Meals, socks, clothing bank,
personal hygiene supplies, internet access, intentional mentoring
and guidance, crisis intervention, referrals to other services. Tues.Fri.
12-4pm & Sat. 11-2pm. https://www.soxplace.com
THE SPOT AT URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): 2100 Stout St. 303-2910442.
Drop-in hours Mon.-Fri. 8-11am.
YOUTH AGED 15-20 IN NEED OF IMMEDIATE OVERNIGHT SHELTER SERVICES:
303-974-2928 https://www.urbanpeak.org/denver/programs-andservices/drop-in-center
URBAN
PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): Youth 14-24 in Denver and Colorado
Springs. Overnight shelter, food, clothing, showers, case workers,
job skills and training, ID and birth certificate assistance, GED
assistance, counseling and housing. 730 21st St. 303-974-2900
https://www. urbanpeak.org
FREE MEALS
CAPITOL HEIGHTS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: 1100 Fillmore St., Sat. lunch
at 11:30am; https://www.capitolheightspresbyterian.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES: https://www.mealsforpoor.org
CATHEDRAL OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION: 1530 Logan St.;
sandwiches & coffee Mon.-Fri. 8:30am; https://www.
denvercathedral.org
CHRIST’S BODY MINISTRIES: 850 Lincoln; Mon. closed, Tues.-Thurs.
10am-3pm, Fri. 8am-11pm; groceries & hot meal on Sat. at 2pm (at
16th & York); Sun. church service at 6pm, dinner at 7pm; https://
www.christsbody.org
CHRIST IN THE CITY: Home-cooked meal, weekly; Lunch in the Park is
on Wednesdays from 12-1 at Benedict Fountain Park (Tremont and
22nd); https://www.christinthecity.org
CITYSQUARE DENVER: 2575 S. Broadway; 303-783-3777; Food pantry
Tues. 10am-6pm; https://www.citysquare.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES: 1820 Broadway (in front of
Trinity United Methodist Church); Hot meals served M, T, Th., F -
11:45-12:15; https://www.mealsforpoor.org
DENVER RESCUE MISSION: 1130 Park Avenue West; 303-294-0157; 3
meals 7 days/week, 5:30am, 12pm, 6pm; https://www.
denverrescuemission.org
HAVEN OF HOPE: 1101 W. 7th Ave.; 303-607-0855; M-F. 7am-1pm.
Not open weekends; Breakfast is at 8am, lunch is served at 11am;
https://www.havenofhope.org
HARE KRISHNA TEMPLE: 1400 Cherry St., free vegetarian feast on Sun.,
6:45-7:30pm; https://www.krishnadenver.com
HIS LOVE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH: 910 Kalamath St.; Community dinner
on Thurs., 6-6:45pm, Men’s breakfast 1st Sat. of the month, 8-10am,
Women’s breakfast 2nd Sat., 9-11am; https://www.hislovefellowship.
org
HOLY GHOST CATHOLIC CHURCH: 1900 California St.; Sandwiches,
M-Sat., 10-10:30am; https://www.holyghostchurch.org
OPEN DOOR MINISTRIES: 1567 Marion St.; 303-830-2201; Sat.
morning breakfast: 8am, Sun. dinner (required church attendance
at 4:30pm); meal served at 6pm; https://www.odmdenver.org/home
ST. ELIZABETH’S: Speer Blvd. & Arapahoe St. on Auraria Campus, 7
days/week, 11:00am; Food, coffee; https://www.stelizabethdenver.
org
ST. FRANCIS CENTER: 2323 Curtis St., Wed. & Fri. 3-4:30pm (except
third Wed. of each month); https://www.sfcdenver.org
SAME CAFÉ: 2023 E. Colfax Ave; 720-530-6853;Restaurant serving
mostly organic food—not free, but pay what you can or work off
your meal in the kitchen; Open Mon.-Sat., 11am to 2pm, Closed
Sun. & holidays; https://www.soallmayeat.org
VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA: 2877 Lawrence St., breakfast (8am), lunch
(11:30am), dinner (5pm) Mon.-Thurs., 12pm on Fri., 1pm on Sun.
Food & clothing bank 9:30am-4pm Mon.-Thurs.; https://www.
voacolorado.org/gethelp-denvermetro-foodnutrition-themission
LGBTQ+ SUPPORT
THE TREVOR PROJECT: 866-488-7386: https://www.thetrevorproject.
org
LGBT NATIONAL YOUTH TALKLINE: 800-246-7743: https://www.
lgbthotline.org/youth-talkline
PRIDE INSTITUTE: 800-547-7433
TRUE COLORS UNITED: 212-461-4401, https://www.truecolorsunited.
org
VETERANS & SENIORS
DENVER INNER CITY PARISH: 1212 Mariposa St.; 303-322-5733; VOA
Dining Center for Seniors, aged 60 and older, W-Sat. 9am-12pm;
Food Bank, W-F; Tickets at 9am, food bank open 10am-12pm; dicp.
org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES: 846 E. 18th Ave.; For those aged 60 or
older; TV room, bus tokens, mental/physical health outreach, 3
meals, M-F -7am-7pm; Sun. 11am-4pm; https://www.
seniorsupportservices.org
VA MEDICAL CENTER: 1700 N Wheeling St.; Aurora 303-399-8020:
https://www.va.gov/findlocations/facility/vha_554A5
VETERANS GUIDE: https://www.veteransguide.org; Veterans
Disability Calculator https://www.veteransguide.org/va-disabilitycalculator
YOUTH
SERVICES
SOX PLACE (YOUTH SERVICES): 2017 Larimer St.;
303-296-3412Daytime drop-in shelter for youth 12-30; Meals,
socks, clothing bank, personal hygiene supplies, internet access,
intentional mentoring and guidance, crisis intervention, referrals
to other services. T-F - 12-4pm & Sat. 11am-2pm. Instagram: @
Soxplace
THE SPOT AT URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): 2100 Stout St. 303-2910442;
Youth aged 15-20 in need of immediate overnight shelter
services, 303-974-2928; Drop-in hours Mon.-Fri. 8-11am https://
www.urbanpeak.org/denver/programs-and-services/drop-incenter
SUNSHINE
BEHAVIORAL HEALTH (YOUTH SERVICES): 833-931-2484;
Services for youth facing substance abuse, addiction, mental health
disorders, or a combination of these conditions; https://www.
sunshinebehavioralhealth.com
URBAN PEAK (YOUTH SERVICES): 730 21st St., Denver; 303-974-2900;
Ages14-24; Serving Denver & Colo Springs; Overnight shelter, food,
clothing, showers, case workers, job skill/straining, ID and birth
certificate assistance, GED assistance, counseling and housing;
https://www. urbanpeak.org
DENVER VOICE
APRIL 2026
15
S I S
S P E C
I S H U L N A E
E S O L E O I V
S K I P B O
S A P P Y
T E R R E
A R E A S
V I R T U A L R E A L I T Y
E C T O
A N N A L
Z S A
O M E L E T S
F O O T E D D E L O S
C O N T R A D I C T S
B E R R A U N S E A T
C R U M P L E
C O S
P O L I O
D I D I T
E V E N I
B E S E T
E N T R E
D R U M U P
C A N E
S A M E D I F F E R E N C E
T O W
S O W E D R O E
T O S S
A L E
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