׉?ׁB!בCט 
 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://fTtLdnargAXVHk3fULOLIofEEPbCMhhrNVR91tUbn7s `׉	 7cassandra://80f-pOy8yVANsQXIs7zEMZxpc9B8_ywkMqHPiNDt7Rs͆C`q׉	 7cassandra://CMHsX8xi83arJd44qy6PPCgDcTaqqaokN81eMNvlLX80_` ׉	 7cassandra://E1QJPUiLnPTSdLbqzFSo1q8uDKNkJybgUbag-6T83JY } i͠TaӱWVנaӱWY 	<G́9ׁHhttp://DENVERVOICE.ORGׁׁЈ׈EaѱWD׉E$
2
SUGGESTED
DONATION
@DenverVOICE
VENDOR PROFILE:
LARMARQUES SMITH
HOW CHAOS
BLOOMED
NEW IMPROV THEATRE
PROVIDES OUTLET FOR
CREATIVITY, ENTERTAINMENT,
AND INCLUSION
PAGE 6
COMMUNITY IS
THE SERVICE
NETWORK COFFEEHOUSE
REOPENS AFTER BEING SHUT
DOWN DUE TO PANDEMIC
PAGE 8
LEFT BEHIND
AFGHAN EVACUEES FEEL
LEFT BEHIND AS COLORADO
RESETTLEMENT AGENCIES
FACE CHALLENGES
PAGE 10
VOICES OF
OUR COMMUNITY
PAGES 3, 5, 11, 12
EVENTS / PUZZLES
PAGE 13
RESOURCES
PAGE 15
JANUARY 2022 | Vol.27 Issue 1
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:
ART: GIGI GALEN
׉	 7cassandra://CMHsX8xi83arJd44qy6PPCgDcTaqqaokN81eMNvlLX80_` aѱWEaѱWD
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://SPUTMsapnAPuKRydjxb5j2lOI6YCZu0zsLKiTxufh5A X`׉	 7cassandra://El8IFj_dQ_DjyopclirfEDxXWpzRxE4HEB-x11ev12we`q׉	 7cassandra://vw7Qtw88MMdiN-BQIiTVERs-3YqlODF9tKcpLbUAZLg!` ׉	 7cassandra://WpaMsV6jv5AfIah5iRd8PBfEjETvbVOLQkPTPWkp2F4 j͠TaӱWZט 
 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://Mi29OWqG-pGp-90Hw3BwyyxTlWzFIhDwf8zhKveBdG4 &`׉	 7cassandra://iYPG5H08jXvG5D9tKGFZsQc40tV3CFqTapZQZx3thhMy`q׉	 7cassandra://WQOl2zDAQgblKdEjwwMxCQnX2XDo8DcaVOGNKmOlvzo%` ׉	 7cassandra://qBBA7Afi01SQdSWNbHmVzRKNnW-uYuaMaMTlH5Od97M  #R͠TaӱW[נaӱWg uc̏9ׁHmailto:ads@denvervoice.orgׁׁЈנaӱWf v9ׁH $http://denvervoice.org/subscriptionsׁׁЈנaӱWe ̫9ׁHmailto:program@denvervoice.orgׁׁЈנaӱWd g9ׁHhttp://denvervoice.orgׁׁЈ׉EEDITOR’S NOTE
IN LATE SEPTEMBER I read a tweet
reminding folks it was only three
months until Christmas. I like
the winter holiday season, but
I’ve never been a fan when those
countdowns start any sooner
than mid-November. After
the
ELISABETH MONAGHAN
MANAGING EDITOR
emotional windburn these past
two years have inflicted, however,
I was relieved to be reminded that
2021 was coming to a close.
And now that we have said
goodbye to 2021, many of us are working diligently to honor
our New Year’s resolutions. Instead of including an Ask
a Vendor question this month about the changes VOICE
vendors planned to make for 2022, we went with our vendor
Raelene Johnson’s suggestion to have them share their
wishes for 2022.
We’ve asked vendors about their resolutions more than
once in the past, so I appreciate that Johnson wanted to
change it up. I prefer the idea of wishes for a new year versus
resolutions. It seems to me that a wish may morph from
something simple, like good health, to something significant,
like the eradication of COVID-19. A resolution seems much
more rigid because it requires focus and dedication, and if
going to fulfill it, I need to be committed to it and must take
action to make it happen — otherwise, it’s meaningless.
I do have a resolution, as well as a wish, for 2022. I resolve
to be more hopeful and to make more of an effort to see the
best in humanity. I can get there if I make an effort to be
kinder, more patient, and demonstrate more empathy. I
also have a wish, which is that all of us would show more
January CONTRIBUTORS
GILES CLASEN is a freelance
photographer who regularly
contributes his work to the VOICE
for editorial projects, fundraisers,
and events. He has also served on
the VOICE’s Board of Directors.
ROBERT DAVIS is an awardwinning
freelance reporter for
the Denver VOICE. His work has
also appeared in Colorado Public
Works Journal, Fansided, Colorado
Journal, and Medium.com.
CAT EVANS is a Colorado native born
and raised in the Baker neighborhood
of Denver. She is a musician, poet,
photographer, cinematographer,
and free thought enthusiast. She is
focused on translatable activism
through visuals and sound.
DENVERVOICE.ORG
CE.ORG
@deeOCE
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Jennifer Seybold
MANAGING EDITOR
Elisabeth Monaghan
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
Anthony Cornejo
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
Hannah Bragg
VOLUNTEER COPY EDITORS
Ashton Brown
Haven Enterman
Kersten Jaeger
Kate Marshall
Aaron Sullivan
Laura Wing
ARTISTS/PHOTOGRAPHERS
Giles Clasen
Cat Evans
Sarah Ford
Gigi Galen
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.
WRITERS
Lando Allen
Brian Augustine
Osha Bear
V. beRt
Cat Evans
Raelene Johnson
Jerry Rosen
Larmarques Smith
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Nikki Lawson, President
Michelle Stapleton, Vice President
Jeff Cuneo, Treasurer
Zephyr Wilkins, Secretary
Chris Boulanger
Donovan Cordova
Raelene Johnson
Julia Watson
Cabal Yarne
compassion, patience, and love for one another. Surely,
that’s not too lofty.
Whether you have made resolutions, wishes for the New
Year, or chose not to do either, here’s to 2022 and the promise
this new year holds. ■
With the money they make selling the VOICE, vendors are
able to pay for their basic needs. Our program provides
vendors with an immediate income and a support group
of dedicated staff members and volunteers. Vendors are
independent contractors who receive no base pay.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT editor@denvervoice.org
VENDOR PROGRAM program@denvervoice.org • (720) 320-2155
ADVERTISING ads@denvervoice.org
MAILING ADDRESS PO Box 1931, Denver CO 80201
VENDOR OFFICE 989 Santa Fe Drive, Denver, CO 80204
OFFICE HOURS: Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. until 12 p.m.
Orientation is held every day we are open, but
prospective vendors must arrive by 10:00 a.m.
2 DENVER VOICE January 2022
STAFF
CONTRIBUTORS
BOARD
CONTACT US
׉	 7cassandra://vw7Qtw88MMdiN-BQIiTVERs-3YqlODF9tKcpLbUAZLg!` aѱWF׉E`VENDOR PROFILE
my natural tardiness
VOICE Vendor Profi le:
LARMARQUES SMITH
BY LARMARQUES SMITH, DENVER VOICE VENDOR
THE PAST TWO YEARS HAVE BEEN
THE LONGEST I care to remember.
With a worldwide pandemic in
effect, it can be hard to recollect
notable events of the past two
years — like the fact
that
I
LARMARQUES SMITH. CREDIT: SARAH FORD
accomplished one of my lifelong
dreams: becoming a barista and
working in a coffee shop.
In the midst of the pandemic,
I landed a job working with the
Denver VOICE in partnership with a coffee bar in Uptown to
give vendors an employment opportunity for those who have
been out of the workforce for a minute.
The discussions about the partnership started around the
time the City of Denver decided to do something about the
homeless population during the pandemic. Some of those
staying at shelters that had been shut down because of the
pandemic were moved to the Western Stock Show Complex to
accommodate the social distancing mandate.
Despite the shutdown, I began working and started to feel
like a regular member of society (whatever that means). It was
difficult at first to get into the groove of having a job while
staying at the Western Stock Show Complex. No alarm clock,
no early morning showers before work, etcetera, coupled with
(it’s a flaw I try to combat every day -
LOL) made it difficult for me to make it on time to the coffee
shop. I managed to pull it together, and with the help of another
community organization, Reciprocity, I was able to secure a
bike, which ultimately saved my job.
It was the week before Independence Day when a good
friend of mine and I decided to look into a program that took
people who — for whatever reason — were more susceptible to
contract COVID-19. The location was a hotel, where everyone
was COVID-free in a very controlled environment, provided
we take a test and the results were negative.
Because my friend and I both are immunocompromised, we
thought the test was a good idea and signed up for it just in time
for the upcoming holiday. I moved into the hotel later that day
after taking the test and worked the coffee shop on the Fourth
of July weekend.
On Monday morning, my phone wouldn’t stop ringing.
Trying to be a responsible employee, I was reluctant to answer.
Turns out it was the nurse from the Western Stock Show
Complex calling to inform me that I had tested positive for
COVID-19. She told me that I needed to stay put, and someone
would be there shortly to take me to another quarantine site.
Scary! I had to inform my boss as well as fellow employees that
I was positive for COVID-19 and would not be at work for a
couple of weeks. The most frightening part of this is that I had
no signs or symptoms of the virus.
I was sent away to another hotel that was designated as a
quarantine site for active COVID cases and was told I had to
stay on-site at all times. I mean. I couldn’t even go to 7-Eleven,
which was right next door. No visitors were allowed at the hotel,
and no one was allowed in anyone else’s room at any time for
any reason. This lasted about 10 days.
During my quarantine, the only symptom I can recall
was extreme fatigue which, was odd for me. For being
immunocompromised, my immune system was and continues
to be in good shape. I’ve been undetectable for several years,
and I stay extremely active, but this time, I really felt so tired.
One good thing out of my stay at “Chateau COVID
Quarantine” is that I got to reconnect with a friend I’d lost contact
with over the previous year. He learned he had contracted
COVID after being left for dead in a hotel room by his friends.
After about 10 days, I received notice that I would be
discharged in the next day or two. Relieved I would be able to
get back to work, see my friends, and get back to a somewhat
normal existence. In the meantime, the coffee shop was shut
down for a week and had to be cleaned. All the employees
had to take a COVID-19 test, and they had to negative before
they could come back to work, myself included. After taking
another COVID test, I was able to return to work. I was also
able to move back to the hotel for the high-risk group for
contracting Coronavirus.
Shortly after my quarantine, I made an appointment with my
infectious disease doctor, who also happens to be my primary
care physician. She wanted to be sure I was well and stayed
healthy after surviving Coronavirus.
Throughout the past year, working with my medical
caseworker, my doctor was able to secure a Section 8 Housing
Voucher in an effort to keep me healthy by way of a stable living
environment. I can’t say it would have been possible for me to
have found safe and stable housing without the coronavirus;
Although I still have concerns about the long-lasting effects
COVID may have, I’m happy to be housed and healthy. I’m
also very thankful for all of the community organizations and
partners that made it possible. ■
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-deductable. Go to
denvervoice.org to give a one-time or recurring donation.
You can also mail a check to:
Denver VOICE | P.O. Box 193 | 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.
January 2022 DENVER VOICE 3
׉	 7cassandra://WQOl2zDAQgblKdEjwwMxCQnX2XDo8DcaVOGNKmOlvzo%` aѱWGaѱWF
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://gmlsBnya7DbqvzNjA-WxLwuVBH6Mk5Q7C42cYtp4yHU `׉	 7cassandra://WK0OewRfzhqC2iB-Awcbo4fepE5fZW0K06CeGV-ExMA͂`q׉	 7cassandra://Ci3pPg28X0EzV2-9F7j94SO9NNgn3m7NV76Zf6tZm0E&` ׉	 7cassandra://S6q6PUMQ9CPLOPOU0QrifpQVqpeQmRdGuKtx0qya_AM a; ͠TaԱWhט 
 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://_fCeMjpRKZlMnuU_PsnccvRXM6FyrJvQA9GTnryYIGc D`׉	 7cassandra://bDSc4bhHG21GT-KCtTf2MyFAw6UXRw0HDqs6eyZ3Rpo[A`q׉	 7cassandra://KIcowmAojBawgy18KF1i1d5ywR-KnTBwU9uPCF1nYjAD` ׉	 7cassandra://Ldk2a7otLeQdE8IsYChA4vgcNXGPmCjtyN5CxrvGmBw -͠TaԱWiנaԱWn 	 Ձ9ׁH  mailto:community@denvervoice.orgׁׁЈנaԱWm ́̼9ׁHmailto:program@denvervoice.orgׁׁЈנaԱWl _t!9ׁHhttp://DENVERVOICE.ORG/VENDORׁׁЈ׉E!NATIONAL STORY
KC TENANTS
An activist group experiencing the
harms of the affordable housing
and eviction crisis first-hand
offers a model of possibility for
fed up tenants worldwide
BY ANN-DERRICK GAILLOT
Kansas City, smack dab in the US Midwest in a Republican-led state,
is often overlooked in the national conversation about the country’s
housing crisis. KC Tenants – an organization made up of members
of Kansas City’s communities of renters – fights for cooperative
housing, social housing, and a dignified response to the city’s
housing, eviction, and homelessness crises. Ever since its formation
in 2019, it’s made its demands for a better world known through
carefully-researched policy proposals as well as direct actions
matching the urgency of the issues they’re addressing. Its work
offers a model of possibility for fed up tenants worldwide. INSP North
America spoke to KC Tenants co-founder Diane Charity.
WHEN THE MEMBERS OF KC TENANTS show up together in their
yellow shirts, they come boldly proclaiming their demands
on their backs: “What we want is safe, accessible, and truly
affordable homes.” KC Tenants leader Diane Charity reads the
black print to me over the phone from Kansas City, Missouri
where the tenants union and advocacy group is based. She
emphasizes the last demand with a straightforwardness that
has come to define the group’s approach to creating change.
“Truly affordable homes doesn’t mean that these out-of-state
people that come in and get all this funding to make these
affordable houses [that are] cheaply made,” she says. “Hike
the rent up every year to the point where it puts us out, which
gentrifies our neighborhood, and then they act like they’re
doing us a favor.”
Rather, KC Tenants, made up of members of the city’s
communities of renters, fights for cooperative housing, social
housing, and a dignified response to the city’s housing, eviction,
and homelessness crises. And ever since its formation in
2019, it’s made its demands for a better world known through
carefully-researched policy proposals as well as direct actions
matching the urgency of the issues they’re addressing.
From leaders chaining themselves to a county courthouse
door in an effort to stop eviction court proceedings to
confronting city Mayor Quinton Lucas at a protest at City Hall,
KC Tenants has never taken it easy on Kansas City’s elected
officials. And why would they? Its members experience the
harms of the city’s long-standing affordable housing and
eviction crisis first-hand on a daily basis. “One of our founding
philosophies is that we are the experts on housing,” says
Charity, who was a founding member of KC Tenants alongside
Founding Director Tara Raghuveer, Board President Tiana
Caldwell, and Brandy Granados. “We are the experts because
we have the lived experience.”
On the day of our interview (18 November 2021), Charity
and her fellow KC Tenants members were preparing for the
organization’s town hall with the mayor in attendance. That
evening, organizers led those gathered at the auditorium of a
local school, with hundreds more viewing on Facebook Live.
It included an opening song, a panel answering questions on
PHOTO COURTESY OF KC TENANTS
social housing and the group’s plans for a Housing Trust Fund,
and testimony from renters in the audience on their visions for
housing in the city.
KC Tenants has consistently kept pressure on Lucas to
listen to and face the city’s most housing vulnerable residents
ever since his election to the office just months after the
group was founded. At their dogged insistence, he spent his
first night as mayor in the substandard apartment one KC
Tenants member lived in with her children, complete with
sorely-needed but unprovided repairs and the sounds of
gunshots outside. The group’s creative direct action sent a
clear message to city officials: Kansas City’s tenants are taking
power into their own hands.
As in other American cities, renters in Kansas City face rising
rents, a dearth of affordable housing, and a general attitude
of disdain for the many struggling with housing insecurity
and homelessness. But in recent years, by harnessing the
power of grassroots organizing, an extensive, months-long
research project examining other cities, and unrelenting hope,
KC Tenants has managed to achieve big wins for the city’s
tenants. These included successfully advocating for the city’s
adoption of an historic Tenants Bill of Rights in 2020. “All of
these politicians that talked so condescendingly towards it said,
‘We’ll write that ordinance for you and then we’ll get it passed.’
And we said, ‘No, you won’t. You won’t write anything because
you don’t live our experience,” remembers Charity about the
fight for the Tenants Bill of Rights. In her eyes, the group rejects
a local tradition of polite passivity and confrontation avoidance
known in the area as ‘Kansas City Nice’.
The kind of determination KC Tenants uses to keep public
officials engaged and held accountable to their constituents
may go against the grain of ‘Kansas City Nice’. However,
Charity surmises that sticking to a ‘Kansas City Nice’ attitude
does nothing for the fight for truly affordable housing. “We’re
saying we’re not taking that BS anymore. We do have rights
and we will stand up,” she says. “We’re that beam of light that
people are saying, ‘Wow, These people have the nerve to think
that they’re going to get the world as it should be instead of
surviving the world as it is. And that is what we’re doing. We
know it can be better.”
Kansas City, smack dab in the Midwest in a Republicanled
state, is often overlooked in the national conversation
about the US’s housing crisis. And yet the KC Tenants union’s
successes and structure — which includes a hotline, a team
that researches and crafts policy, a team that organizes tenants
unions, and a team that helps tenants fight evictions as well
as unfair and illegal housing practices — offers a model of
possibility for fed up tenants worldwide.
It entered 2021 in high gear, proclaiming the months ahead
the Year of the Tenant, beginning with Zero Eviction January,
during which the group’s members took direct action to delay
more than 900 eviction hearings that month. Then, after
months of advocacy and organizing, the group helped win
funding for an Office of the Tenant Advocate to enforce the
Tenants Bill of Rights in Spring 2021. It ended the year with
another major victory: the city council passed an ordinance
providing legal counsel to tenants, no matter what their
income is. Drafted and pushed by KC Tenants, along with
fellow advocacy groups the Heartland Center for Jobs and
Freedom and the Missouri Workers Center/Stand Up KC,
the historic program is slated to be in place by summer 2022.
Now, the union is pushing for an ordinance it drafted for a
People’s Housing Trust Fund that calls for the city to divert
funding from policing and tax incentives for developers into
permanently establishing and maintaining affordable housing.
Though many cities already have housing trust funds
in place, KC Tenants hopes to establish one with crucial
safeguards in place as far as tenant rights and representation
in governance, avoiding creating another “a slush fund for
developers and property owners,” as the group says in its fund
proposal released in June 2021. “ “We can fight for something.
We may not get everything, but if we start with housing, that’s
a start for us. Then we can go on to the next thing and the next
thing,” Charity says. “But if you don’t have a place to lay your
head—to actually sleep and then get dressed to go to school
and work the next morning— it’s the scariest thing that can
ever happen to you, you know? It’s unfathomable that people
are doing that.”
Though every community has its unique struggles, Charity’s
advice for people looking to start their own tenants’ unions is
the same. “Give grace. Give grace to whomever you’re speaking
with. Listen to them and allow them to tell their story,” she
says. “[Whatever] their walk of life, they have that seed of hope
in them that things will get better. We spark that seed of hope
and it takes us to where we’re trying to get to obtain safe, truly
affordable housing that’s accessible for anyone and everyone.
Housing is a human right.” ■
Ann-Derrick Gaillot is a freelance journalist and writer based
in Missoula, Montana
Courtesy of INSP North America / International Network of
Street Papers
4 DENVER VOICE January 2022
׉	 7cassandra://Ci3pPg28X0EzV2-9F7j94SO9NNgn3m7NV76Zf6tZm0E&` aѱWH׉E
WINTER
WISH LIST
NEW ITEMS NEEDED:
Socks
Reusable water bottles
Sunscreen, toothpaste, deodorant, chapstick
Paper products for the office
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)
Hats or beanies
Blankets
Gloves
BRIAN AUGUSTINE
I would like to reconnect with people who were quarantined. To
remember that we need to get along. We aren’t treating each other
with respect and forgiveness. The anger that is just wrong.
Please don’t let your frustrations take over the reality of your life.
Oh yeah, I’d also like to win the Powerball.
RAELENE JOHNSON
I hope I can be helping my fellow worker to help them sell better. I want to
help anyone who is lost to get help. If I’m the best person I canb e, then
others can see my honesty in wanting to help them.
If you help others, you will find your life will be fulfilling.
Happy New Year! Be the best you!
JERRY ROSEN
My wish is to do more sales for the New Year and to do a much better job in
many ways. In addition, I wish for better health and to prosper in many ways.
ASK A VENDOR
THIS COLUMN IS A PLACE FOR DENVER VOICE VENDORS TO
RESPOND TO QUESTIONS FROM OUR READERS AND STAFF.
Q What is your wish for 2022?
A
LANDO ALLEN
I wish I could meet some of my goals. For one, I’ve been trying to save
money to get my own house. I also am trying to finish getting my music
done. I am also trying to sell more papers and make it through the winter.
DENVERVOICE.ORG/VENDOR-NEEDS
Drop-offs are accepted Monday through Friday,
9 a.m. - 12 p.m. or schedule a drop-off by
emailing program@denvervoice.org.
What do YOU want to ask?
If you have a question or issue you would like vendors to discuss, please email community@denvervoice.org.
January 2022 DENVER VOICE 5
׉	 7cassandra://KIcowmAojBawgy18KF1i1d5ywR-KnTBwU9uPCF1nYjAD` aѱWIaѱWH
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://q7ycjYqhi4Z-LigQ_0rBcKrd4_phWOo_Wgl8O4PPW6U z`׉	 7cassandra://_zPONYSWSSFcYH9yb9dAFL19ex-c8w_TWIRPYHqCaqQsA`q׉	 7cassandra://gauAQjfD_Y4egMXjpPLErllB4JR791u3zTUHqwuBDbU(` ׉	 7cassandra://sJ0IzZ8ggRyE5W5qrQRoQVyjKNhC01vopQj1nW4g-iY q͠TaԱWoט 
 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://yho2ofd9oXbNhJGOkLKhlFanJqIACZKDkvxoFJJNzFo l+`׉	 7cassandra://a0cTlT6IlKQY6GSFwDRkB6-omVDB88tmW7kGdb2x6ZIx`q׉	 7cassandra://J1SIxRk13qWGVuFMlZlVT8NnGQfhgYIMwlqZ6zK1PJ4)&` ׉	 7cassandra://ZErsmhz0ae28XO96-mcPIh52Qcc7MvkpbJT5eR1zQ3A 
)<͠TaԱWpנaձWu v(n9ׁHhttp://chaosbloom.comׁׁЈ׉ELOCAL FEATURE
HOW CHAOS
BLOOMED
BY CAT EVANS
SOUTH BROADWAY IS AN EVER-EVOLVING, deeply rooted historical
street – essential to the spirit of Denver. Along its length, you
will find almost anything you can imagine: a vast array of
vintage stores, coffee shops, plant havens, restaurants, and
bars — both new and old — where the public can enjoy late
nights, early mornings, and everything in between.
Among the many emerging businesses calling Broadway
their home, there’s one, in particular, you don’t want to miss –
Chaos Bloom Theatre.
The off-center, quirky Chaos Bloom Theatre, located at
70 S. Broadway, is a creative space where people perform
comedic improvisation and can take courses to prepare them
for virtually any stage. Chaos opened its doors in mid-2021 and
has been firing on all cylinders ever since. This is no ordinary
theater, however. Each room at Chaos Bloom, down to its turfcovered
bathroom, is done with intention. A customized mural
of the Denver skyline rests between the stage and the teaching
rooms located at the further end of the building, reminding
each passerby of the city in which they are experiencing. This
unusual design, detail by detail, was pioneered by one of the
four current owners of Chaos Bloom, Amey Goerlich, who
within the past year, took creative control.
The performing arts deal with major gender disparity
within leadership positions, and it is dramatically skewed
toward men. The opportunities for a woman to step in, call
the shots, and be the face of creative establishments are far
and few in between. According to womenarts.org, women
“face enormous employment discrimination in the arts and
media.” Time will tell how this will shift, but for now, Chaos
has handed the reins to a woman with a vision.
Goerlich began her theatrical career in 2001 at Upright
Citizens Brigade in New York. She performed with them
until 2016, when she moved to LA to teach at Westside
Comedy. She did that for three years until COVID came and
everything shut down in Los Angeles.
“I knew I wouldn’t survive off just teaching online,” said
Goerlich, explaining why she and her husband were on the
hunt for a new opportunity. Serendipitously, Justin Francin,
a co-owner at Chaos Bloom, reached out to Goerlich and
asked her to come to Denver to be the director of training.
The classes Goerlich now offers vary by level/intensity –
beginner and onward. A sketch comedy 101 hybrid class
costs $125 for six weeks. In the class, sketch comedy
basics, include content, editing, script structure, and page
to performance transformation. Chaos Bloom also offers
various types of training. According to Goerlich, “It’s a
different type of training than you can get anywhere else. I
built my own curriculum and asked myself questions like
how can I make this the most entertaining.” All classes range
from $100-$200 and last about six weeks. A full array of
their educational offerings can be found on their website,
chaosbloom.com.
“Given the opportunity to create an entirely new curriculum
that was inclusive was a huge opportunity. I don’t think a lot
of women in improv get that opportunity.”
From the ground up, Goerlich assisted in developing
the space that so many would soon call home. For months,
CREDIT: CAT EVANS
6 DENVER VOICE January 2022
׉	 7cassandra://gauAQjfD_Y4egMXjpPLErllB4JR791u3zTUHqwuBDbU(` aѱWJ׉EfLOCAL FEATURE
CREDIT: CAT EVANS
CREDIT: CAT EVANS
Goerlich worked for free, along with all other willing bodies
that tirelessly pieced everything together until Chaos Bloom
opened as the unique space it is today. “The more time I
spent here, the more Justin started to see how I could change
things on every level,” said Goerlich.
With nothing but
Additionally, the ongoing pandemic has necessitated a
time, amidst a pandemic standstill,
Goerlich began organizing finances while shows began
happening outside throughout the summer as a sort of
preamble to the official opening of the building itself.
Improv shows were a roaring success, initially being held
in an alley down the block, each night filled with eager
observers fresh off the heels of the first COVID lockdown.
As a result of her hard work, Goerlich became a co-owner.
Two more owners were also included to collaborate and
build something new. “We put our very specific skillsets
together in order to build what it has become. It’s like a lowgrade
Meow Wolf in here,” said Goerlich.
Speaking on the impact of COVID and the success of
the theater, Goerlich expressed gratitude toward the time
that the pandemic provided. “I used the time to organize
everything, and we’ve got to a place where it’s a really oiled,
maintained machine, and we keep it up.” She is also grateful
for the vaccine mandates, as it they have helped to relieve
health concerns about a smaller space filled with unfamiliar
bodies. “Now I know that when people walk in here, they’re
vaccinated. Now I know that everyone will be safe.”
need for this sort of entertainment. “I think we have stifled
ourselves from laughing because of all these issues going on,”
said Goerlich, “We need that release. For me, I have to have
that outlet. We all need that outlet.”
Most people discover Chaos Bloom Theatre by word of
mouth. “We have people in the neighborhood coming in all
the time. You rarely see an improviser in the audience, it’s
always just random people. Then people become regulars,
and they keep coming back and bringing friends.”
Every week there are different shows and classes.
“Relationsh*t” is a flagship show where the Chaos Bloom
players interview someone from the audience about a weird
or awkward date that they’ve been on.
“Last night we had to turn people away because we were so
packed,” said Goerlich. “Every show the audience is engaged
with the performers, the space is intimate and immediate and
welcoming to all. It’s nice to see people come back out again.”
The
theater
is
constantly working
toward inclusivity,
diversity, and bringing new people in. As Goerlich explained,
“We are in schools, we are outside. We are trying to get people on
stage where people can be watching and say, ‘Oh, that person
is like me.’ There is much emphasis on what voices you can and
cannot use as a performer, fine lines as to what is appropriate
and what is not. and those expectations do not waver. We’ve got
to show people we can do this, and then do it better.”
The performers and teachers are nationally trained,
ranging from New York to LA, to Chicago – each hub
represented. “The improv, the comedy, the sketch – it’s all
high level. My curriculum provides the tools for someone to
step up and play at high levels,” said Goerlich.
This up-and-coming theater has only just begun. The vibe
of the room when sitting amongst peers engaging in laughter
and relatability is unmatched. For more information on
the theater, show times, class scheduling and pricing, visit
chaosbloom.com. ■
CREDIT: CAT EVANS
CREDIT: CAT EVANS
CREDIT: CAT EVANS
January 2022 DENVER VOICE 7
׉	 7cassandra://J1SIxRk13qWGVuFMlZlVT8NnGQfhgYIMwlqZ6zK1PJ4)&` aѱWKaѱWJ
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://WhWKtVwMh2oNHrfyf4rbc_R-_rGRlQR3BbLJZ3vZSts V`׉	 7cassandra://wxSJ2iOe84Wh1sLPXOK2WeBHK5UUX34VlYNKiVQRue0x`q׉	 7cassandra://DOE0BuftqMICWJXnMRrF1Cx6TcvwjopcKAWZ5azeyMk(` ׉	 7cassandra://xbxS3S8wEeKuz82g2u4fIkqRBv8PhM_Wia7IBB8ToGw 	V$͠TaձWvט 
 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://8oPP2MkqZuKm5gIllARqLO1uOGJlmtqmE_Dm_xTRWP8 >`׉	 7cassandra://wv8wzJqvbWnUeqDGjN7hd54lLKpVEdftD15v0CbC9h8k_`q׉	 7cassandra://IOr2JJPRee8TQ5mugpvGCEVljZTDJ-LI6M46698GXAk$` ׉	 7cassandra://xqmFaJHSk01LBGomCgEOyQXOzO53wMlV5d9s89MLYJs ͠TaձWw׉ELOCAL STORY
KIFLU POURS COFFEE AT NETWORK COFFEEHOUSE. KIFLU SAID HE COMES TO NETWORK COFFEEHOUSE BECAUSE IT HELPS HIM STRETCH HIS SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY PAYMENTS FURTHER. NETWORK ALLOWS HIM TO HAVE A GROUP OF FRIENDS AND A PLACE TO HANG OUT THAT DOESN’T COST HIM ANYTHING. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
COMMUNITY IS THE SERVICE:
Network Coffeehouse Reopens After Being Shut Down Due to Pandemic
BY GILES CLASEN
NETWORK COFFEEHOUSE is built on community.
It is a place designed to care for those experiencing
homelessness by offering a place to sit together, play cards,
share stories, eat some food, and drink coffee.
“Network is what I would call a hospitality house,” said
Ryan Taylor, director of Network Coffeehouse. “It’s an
invitation for folks living on the street, that oftentimes aren’t
welcome elsewhere, to experience kinship.”
For an organization whose primary service is community,
shutting down due to COVID forced them to rethink how to
provide to those who relied on them.
“People were coming to us pretty quick in March of 2020 and
saying they did not have food, so we started coordinating with
churches and other agencies to be a food source,” Taylor said.
No one was allowed in the building, but every Monday
through Saturday, the small nonprofit provided sack lunches.
On cold days, they pulled together a hot lunch to serve.
“It was a real gift in so many ways because we got to
partner with people that we wouldn’t typically partner with,”
Taylor said.
Network was able to reopen the doors to their coffeehouse
in November and is once again serving coffee and comfort
to anyone who needs it.
Danny, one of Network’s frequent guests before and after
the pandemic forced Network to close, said he was happy to
be back.
“People look down on us, but what they don’t realize is
that they’re one step away from being homeless themselves,”
Danny said. “This is a place that supports us and doesn’t
look down on us. It is important to have that care.”
Another guest, Sophrina, said she had been coming to
Network for years and missed it during the time it had to
be closed.
“I’ve been living on the streets since I was 12 because bad
things happened to me,” Sophrina said. “There is really
nowhere else to go. [Network] gives you hot showers. I
like talking with people playing games and coloring the
coloring books.”
Sophrina then began to cry as she tried to tell friends her
homeless encampment had recently been swept by the City
of Denver. She lost her phone, tent, blanket, and clothes. She
wasn’t sure how she would survive if the weather turned
cold before she could replace them.
Sophrina was embraced in a hug by Kimberly, another
Network guest. They hugged for several minutes until
Sophrina was comforted.
CASEY TALKS WITH FRIENDS AT NETWORK COFFEEHOUSE. CASEY HAS BEEN COMING
TO NETWORK FOR AS LONG AS HE CAN REMEMBER BOTH WHILE HE WAS HOMELESS
AND AFTER FINDING PERMANENT HOUSING. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
8 DENVER VOICE January 2022
׉	 7cassandra://DOE0BuftqMICWJXnMRrF1Cx6TcvwjopcKAWZ5azeyMk(` aѱWL׉ELOCAL STORY
KIMBERLY COMFORTS SOPHRONIA AT NETWORK COFFEEHOUSE. SOPHRONIA HAD LOST ALL OF HER POSSESSIONS DURING A RECENT SWEEP OF A HOMELESS ENCAMPMENT BY DENVER POLICE. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
Kimberly, who came to Network for the first time after
the coffeehouse reopened, shared her story and assured
Sophrina that she wasn’t alone.
“I ended up kind of homeless and am staying with my
nephew,” Kimberly said. “I am trying to make my way to
Houston where my daughter lives.”
Kimberly came to Denver after her house in Simla, Colo.
became infested with mold. She planned to live out of her
car until she could deposit her VA disability check. Instead,
Kimberly’s car, wallet, and ID were stolen, stranding her
in Denver.
Kimberly is working on replacing her ID. In the meantime,
she comes to Network every day.
“This place is great,” Kimberly said. “Having breakfast and
cup of coffee and support. There isn’t a lot out there. Having
a whole social network is amazing and so important.”
While Network was closed,
the organization tried to
relieve some stress and need by contracting to have a
portable toilet in the parking lot available to those living on
the streets.
“The porta potty company didn’t like us much. Everybody
in the company said, ‘We’d rather not work with you,’”
Taylor said.
At times, the toilet became very dirty from use. Then,
during the 2020 protests, the portable toilet was burned to
the ground.
Losing the toilet to protestors didn’t bother Taylor, other
than losing the service the toilet offered.
“In the capitalist society, material shit is seen as higher value
than a human being because profit comes before people,”
Taylor said. “[Society] is often more focused on material
possessions being taken or destroyed rather than the root
cause of a person’s suffering. We focus on the person here.”
A GUEST AT NETWORK COFFEEHOUSE PLUGS HIS PHONE IN TO CHARGE. NETWORK
DOESN’T PROVIDE MANY DIRECT SERVICES OR GOODS, JUST SMALL MEALS, COFFEE, AND
SHOWERS. BUT THE SUPPORT, THE NETWORK IS THE POINT. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
The new mask mandate that went into effect on November
24 has changed a few things at Network. All volunteers must
wear a mask at all times. Guests are invited to wear masks,
but like at restaurants, they aren’t required to when eating
or drinking.
Taylor hopes the mask mandate will slow the spread of the
COVID-19 virus and allow places to stay open.
According to Casey, Network’s focus on creating an
inviting, supportive environment is why he has been a
regular for over a decade. He began visiting when he was
experiencing homelessness. He has continued to visit even
after getting an apartment through Volunteers of America
and disability checks through Social Security.
“I wish I could work. I wish I had a job and the security
that goes with that,” Casey said. “I appreciate that I have this
place to come to every day. Without it, it is a lot harder to
have friends and have support.”
Network doesn’t provide many direct services or goods,
just small meals, coffee, and showers. But the support – the
network – is the point.
“We celebrate when people get housed. We celebrate when
people get resourced. We celebrate when people get sober.
But we want to see these relationships continue over time,
and we want to see people coming back,” Taylor said.
To Taylor, it is obvious why Network sees guests return
even after they have found permanent housing.
“There’s a reason they’re coming back. This is the space
that they feel welcome,” Taylor said. “Denver is a landscape
where there’s not a lot of welcoming places. The uniqueness
of our joint is that we focus primarily pretty much
exclusively on the work of relationship.” ■
January 2022 DENVER VOICE 9
׉	 7cassandra://IOr2JJPRee8TQ5mugpvGCEVljZTDJ-LI6M46698GXAk$` aѱWMaѱWL
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://gXydggl049z9ncIh_doKRKrBp7TQbG8LJ967aP7YtrI `׉	 7cassandra://f_kINOz36EuGF1iQXU4ELo8MEWNEWZVsvprF6BqNJZw{`q׉	 7cassandra://8J624DhZMv16TXjw9t0CSnDNlVtFlVYQhtLwgXT6W2c$q` ׉	 7cassandra://KM8tO5X77IViZveKTn93xXw2PLbC23nQRMWOewP9GWw 3{ ͠TaձWyט 
 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://tJvSKrDFuJJf95uxRadjZyGtQgNQQg8pYOd8ezAPKek S`׉	 7cassandra://GkikgOB3pycrdtLpBWGoMKZQQnitEE0BRZOEBR0n9BYj?`q׉	 7cassandra://Fm4CIiuX25yg8h2TXn_LX9_jKsTKApgLEc9zx-xZNzg!` ׉	 7cassandra://db60OTZpjSiOyXVVRh3ip3vLgl30OHwTef1rM_cE01o q͠TaֱWzנaֱW mz9ׁHhttp://writedenver.orgׁׁЈנaֱW~ L9ׁH ,http://lighthousewriters.org/workshop/denverׁׁЈ׉EXLOCAL STORY
manager. Ironically, he adds that his two-year-old daughter
was able to get hers through the mail.
Siddiqi said he tried going to his case manager’s office
to retrieve the documents, but the strategy turned out to
be both unsuccessful and expensive. Each trip came with
small purchases like a two-way bus fare that Siddiqi said just
resulted in more waiting. The same is true of other tasks like
shopping and running errands, Siddiqi adds. Every trip eats
a little more out of the family’s bottom line.
“Now, I call and call and it just seems like no one is ever
there,” Siddiqi said. “We’re not the kind of people who ask
for or take charity, but they’re all so busy with all of the other
people that are coming here that it’s really causing a problem.”
One of the logjams was created after President Joe Biden
swiftly raised the refugee ceiling to 125,000 per year after
former President Donald Trump had lowered it to 15,000
during his last year in office. This increase lifts the ceiling
to levels not seen since 1994, according to data from the
Migration Policy Institute.
However, the funds needed to bolster the stability service
pipeline arrived much later than the Afghan evacuees.
President Biden signed a bill on December 3 that allocated
$7 billion for resettlement programs. States like New York
started investing their own funds to help settle the evacuees
shortly thereafter despite former Afghan citizens starting
to flow into the country in mid-August after the country’s
government collapsed.
Siddiqi is one of the more than 1,000 evacuees that made
it to Colorado so far, according to data from the Colorado
Refugee Services Program. Since the state typically accepts
three percent of the national resettlement figures, Colorado
could welcome another 1,000 evacuees by the end of the year.
Maria Farrier, Development Manager at ACC, said many
CAPTION: AHMAD SIDDIQI (BACK RIGHT) AND HIS FAMILY IN A PUMPKIN PATCH IN BROOMFIELD, COLORADO. CREDIT: AHMAD SIDDIQI
LEFT BEHIND
Some Afghan evacuees feel left
behind as Colorado resettlement
agencies face housing shortages
and swelling caseloads
BY ROBERT DAVIS
AHMAD SIDDIQI, 35, struggles to do nothing. But after his
family relocated to Broomfield, Colo from Afghanistan
following the government’s collapse in August, it seems that
nothing is all he can do these days.
After spending nearly two decades as an interpreter
connecting U.S. military officials with members of the
former Afghan government, Siddiqi says coming to
America solved a lot of problems for his family. But, like
many of the Afghan evacuees that have already resettled in
Colorado, Siddiqi says the warm welcome is quickly fading
as Colorado’s initial stability service pipeline struggles to
deliver the benefits his family needs to grow roots in their
new community.
“It gave me a lot of hope to come here to the United States,”
Siddiqi said. “But now when I look to the future, it’s kind of
opaque.”
Siddiqi received a Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) from
the State Department for his service in Afghanistan. The
SIV makes him eligible to receive $500 in monthly federal
cash payments as well as health, housing, and food benefits.
But accessing these benefits has proven to be harder than
Siddiqi initially thought as Colorado’s three resettlement
agencies—The International Rescue Committee of Denver
(IRC), Lutheran Family Services of the Rocky Mountains
(LFS), and the African Community Center of Denver
(ACC)—are all face swelling caseloads amid a statewide
housing shortage.
Resettlement agencies act as liaisons between federal
agencies and refugees who qualify for their assistance upon
their arrival. They also help people like Siddiqi navigate
bureaucratic processes to obtain identification, licenses,
and employment.
One critical part of their work is to help Afghan evacuees
like Siddiqi obtain a Social Security Number (SSN) so
they can access additional federal benefits and apply for a
federal work permit. However, Siddiqi says he has struggled
for more than two months to obtain his SSN from his case
resettlement agencies received short notice of the Afghan
evacuees’ arrival, which has made it difficult to secure
temporary housing for incoming folks. She says ACC
is experimenting with a co-hosting model where the
agency connects volunteer hosts with Afghan evacuees
and their families to help drive down wait times. Private
donors have also helped to secure some housing
arrangements, she adds.
But the high volume of resettlement cases is already
thinning out the agency’s scarce resources, Farrier adds.
For example, according to the agency’s annual report, ACC
welcomed more than 1,200 community members last year,
including 70 refugee families and another 55 SIVs, all with
a budget of approximately $2.7 million, the lowest it’s been
over the last four years.
Farrier adds that the agency was already on pace to
increase its number of families served in 2021 because
COVID-19 caused many former clients to return for
additional housing or employment services.
“So far, it’s been really challenging,” Farrier said.
Floyd Preston, a program manager at Lutheran Family
Services in Colorado Springs, echoed Farrier’s sentiments to
The Colorado Springs Gazette. He said his organization is
struggling to keep up with housing demand because rentals
are becoming hard to find in the “hot” housing market.
LFS is even asking its private landlord partners for some
flexibility on rental payments from refugees.
The IRC did not return multiple requests for comment on
this story.
Despite the current challenges, state economists found
that more than 76 percent of the refugees and immigrants
who come to Colorado experience “high integration” within
the first four years of their arrival, meaning they were able to
find employment, place their children in school, and attain
health care, among other social measures.
10 DENVER VOICE January 2022
׉	 7cassandra://8J624DhZMv16TXjw9t0CSnDNlVtFlVYQhtLwgXT6W2c$q` aѱWN׉EFPAGE TITLE
But the logjam for services is impacting the everyday lives
of Afghan refugees like Siddiqi. Since his wife, Hoira, doesn’t
speak English yet, Siddiqi says the family is surviving on
federal cash benefits and another “few hundred dollars” of
food stamps until he can find employment.
And little decisions seem to add up quickly. Siddiqi said
that after his daughter spent $40 on books at a recent school
fair, he and his wife skipped a meal at the end of the month
to balance out the expense. These dilemmas seem to be
cropping up more frequently, too, Siddiqi says.
Even though the family received a “generous” amount of
donation from Broomfield community members upon their
arrival, Siddiqi knows it won’t last long once they move out
of the home they are currently sharing with a local police
officer and his wife.
Siddiqi said his family hopes to move out of the house
soon but finding a reasonable rental home has been “next
to impossible.”
Broomfield’s average rent for a two-bedroom apartment
is close to $1,800 per month, according to data from real
estate website Point2Homes. This means people like Siddiqi
need to find a job that pays at least $72,000 annually to not
be considered housing burdened or spend more than 30
percent of their monthly income on housing expenses.
However, Colorado’s most recent Refugee Integration
Survey and Evaluation (RISE) report, found that immigrant
and refugee households in the state average between $700
and $999 in weekly earnings during their first four years. If
Siddiqi found a job at the high end of the average income
range, he would still be paying approximately 45 percent of
his monthly income on housing.
The mismatch between local wages and housing costs is
one of the “structural barriers” identified by researchers at
the University of Colorado, Boulder in 2019 that can cause
immigrant and refugee families to experience chronic poverty.
Siddiqi says he’d like to work in communications, or
anywhere where he can make enough money to cover the
rent and a few upcoming expenses. He says he wants to
become a citizen, but first, he must get over the hurdle of
getting a green card, which includes a $1,200 application fee.
“It’s one thing to get people out of Afghanistan, but then
when you get here, you basically get nothing,” Siddiqi said.
“I’m really getting tired of it. I just think to myself, maybe this
is all they can do for me?” ■
BEING A CHILDV. beRt
All summer, we frolicked in the
water sprinklers cooling off from
the dry heat, no concern about
drinking from the outdoor hose.
All summer, we played on lush
green lawns, never worried about
weed killer on our bare feet.
All summer, we had deep
brown suntans, not using any
sunscreen or fears of exposure
to the scorching orb above.
All summer, we bounced a tiny red
ball playing jacks, shooting marbles
on dry dirt, and hopscotch on the
colored chalked sidewalk of squares.
All summer, we heard the latest
Beatles vinyl from our neighbor’s
patio on their portable record player.
All summer, when the sun had gone
down, we waited for the Mister Softee
truck, cooling off with their soft
serve ice cream, twisted chocolate
and vanilla dipped in a rainbow of
colored sprinkles on a cake cone.
All summer, we never had a care
in the world, no planning for the
future, just having fun as a child.
WRITING THROUGH
HARD TIMES
COURTESY OF DENVER PUBLIC LIBRARY
AND LIGHTHOUSE WRITERS WORKSHOP
OSHA BEAR
A COLORADO CHILDHOOD
Always looking Westward
“Red” burnt across the valley
The Canyon winds through seasons
Simple places
In a wooded hiding spot
The crunch of snow silent in
a Mountain Lions cry
the scent of juniper and pine
Aspen trees glisten in
quivering communication
journeys through lapping water
Nature’s breathe humming quietly
The noise of the city still feels foreign
unforgiving bumpy
Highways wrapping around
each other like spider webs
Snow caps ascend
The boys discuss
How much powder there will
be to glide down the slopes
Night glistens In Moonlight
and countless stars
Summer fills with soaked tires
and flip-flops littering the creek
Books calm the restlessness
of rainy afternoons
In the midst of candle lit evenings
Thunder rattles the house.
The click of hooves
comes with surprise
10 year old excitement in capturing
a pair of frightened horses.
The smell of roasting chills signals
an abundant Saturday morning
The bustling of bright baskets
filled with farmers delights.
Laughter fills the air in the
abundance of beautiful food.
The Hard Times Writing Workshop is a collaboration between Denver Public Library and Lighthouse
Writers Workshop. It’s open to all members of the public, especially those experiencing homelessness.
Each month, the Denver VOICE publishes a selection of writing from these workshops.
Virtual workshops: lighthousewriters.org/workshop/denver-public-library-hard-times
More writing by these featured poets: writedenver.org
AN AFGHAN WOMAN SITS OUTSIDE AT A PROCESSING CENTER FOR REFUGEES EVACUATED
FROM AFGHANISTAN AT THE DULLES EXPO CENTER NEAR DULLES INTERNATIONAL
AIRPORT IN CHANTILLY, VIRGINIA. CREDIT: REUTERS/KEVIN LAMARQUE
January 2022 DENVER VOICE 11
׉	 7cassandra://Fm4CIiuX25yg8h2TXn_LX9_jKsTKApgLEc9zx-xZNzg!` aѱWOaѱWN
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://vmmJ7sOFZ0kMfrUb7_CXYFSlIBsKs9sEMYwXViNPaTU _`׉	 7cassandra://SpriGWqsuLaRGlhUBxiEeHkgUcFT2Oh523SyFaJdbigk>`q׉	 7cassandra://loBtuF4DFYoMJOt2NdDrZz_4RveO_84963AEVPZ8EVA$` ׉	 7cassandra://o9RhFAhCFchG-yrc0G5NFboDkiP8OdiUZiLqEC2pq18 L͠TaֱW}ט 
 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://Tngp-LJCQWwE1FsQjyCT7dp1s3zqjq4zwAwfQzsjU3o *I`׉	 7cassandra://2K9L1UCeJd264icHtA9kNJfsXVt_ACkCs87xuA8-vQop`q׉	 7cassandra://VAyf4Clm5XjgmlbGvb-ksbCfSd78xINwXwwX1GoE43Y%` ׉	 7cassandra://YfbQ8nF9GD9v-imlB0gAGH5MSZfecZtPYICCsrGOF5o t͠TaֱWנaֱW \̛9ׁHhttp://socialwork.du.edu/eventsׁׁЈנaֱW (̆9ׁHhttp://mcadenver.org/eventsׁׁЈנaֱW B~9ׁHhttp://widerightdenver.comׁׁЈנaֱW |9ׁH "http://theseasonedchef.com/cookingׁׁЈנaֱW 9ׁH %http://facebook.com/ChaosBloomTheaterׁׁЈ׉E
IN YOUR OWN WORDS
RAELENE JOHNSON. CREDIT: CORTNEY TABERNA
BRIAN AUGUSTINE. CREDIT: JESSE BORRELL
SELF, IT’S A NEW YEAR
BY RAELENE JOHNSON, VOICE VENDOR
HAPPY NEW YEAR, SELF.
We get to start over again in this new year, with no bad stuff.
Forget last year. If you feel you messed up, you get to do it over
and be better this new year.
Self, don’t beat yourself up because you feel last year was
not right for you. Let it go.
A new year means you got to do better this year. Look
forward. Do not dwell on last year.
It’s a new year to be a better self, a more caring and loving
self. Self, you always look forward; not back. You can’t change
the past, but you can always change your future.
So, Self, I’m wishing you the best new year ever.
Remember, Self, only you can change you, and only you
can help others this year.
So, Self, be the best you can be this year! ■
LEFT TO RIGHT: JEROME COTTON, ALVIN COTTON, JOHN ALEXANDER. CREDIT: JUSTIN CANALES
REST IN POWER,
ALVIN “MUSTAFA”
COTTON
BY ELISABETH MONAGHAN, MANAGING EDITOR
THE DENVER VOICE COMMUNITY recently lost one of our vendors,
Alvin “Mustafa” Cotton, who died of COVID in December.
A brother of long-time vendors John Alexander and Jerome
Cotton, Mustafa joined the VOICE in 2011. We will share
more about Mustafa in a future issue. All of us at the VOICE
extend our love and condolences to John, Jerome, and the rest
of their family members. ■
LOSING A DEAR FRIEND
BY BRIAN AUGUSTINE, VOICE VENDOR
TODAY, A REALLY GOOD FRIEND DIED. He was a Vietnam vet. Tried
to live the best he could.
I became his medical proxy. Because he didn’t have a lot of
friends, I count myself lucky to be one of them.
Until he met me, he felt very lonely. I was able to get him to
eat better. But, years of malnutrition and smoking took more
than I could help him replace.
As his proxy, I had to make the final decision. One I hated.
But, knew it was best.
He couldn’t keep his oxygen level. He was in pain. So, I sent
him to hospice, knowing he would leave quickly.
He died at 6:37 Sunday night... Three days before his 74
birthday. I really wanted him to see that day. He just wasn’t
going to make it.
To Patrick Hagan, he gave his all to life. Gave as much to God.
As I cry with my loss, I struggle with guilt, for my signature
ended his fight and pain. I just don’t know if I caused his death
prematurely. He knew that I cared for him in life and will care
for his remains.
Make sure everyone you care about hears the word from
your heart to lips to their ear into their hearts. ■
FREE ADDICTION SUPPORT
FOR DENVER RESIDENTS EXPERIENCING
HOMELESSNESS OR FINANCIAL HARDSHIP
(855) 539-9375
WeFaceItTogether.org
12 DENVER VOICE January 2022
׉	 7cassandra://loBtuF4DFYoMJOt2NdDrZz_4RveO_84963AEVPZ8EVA$` aѱWP׉E#EVENTS
WOLFHAWK COMEDY SHOW
We all need a laugh after the holidays. Come check out this weekly comedy show and LOL
to your heart’s content.
WHEN: Mondays, 8 p.m.
COST: $10
WHERE: Chaos Bloom Theatre, 70 S. Broadway INFO: facebook.com/ChaosBloomTheater
23
27
31
COOKING ON-DEMAND
Whether you’re looking to make empanadas, pierogies, fondue, quiche, or tapas, this
online library of cooking classes will make your tummy growl. In-person classes available
as well.
WHEN: Anytime
WHERE: Online
COST: $35
INFO: theseasonedchef.com/cooking-on-demand
51
56
60
64
THE BI-AGENDA:
A COMEDY SHOW FOR THE SILENT MAJORITY
Every month, comedians will gather for laughter and connection in a welcoming space for all.
WHEN: Jan 14, 8:30 p.m.
COST: $12
WHERE: The Wide Right, 2100 Curtis St.
INFO: widerightdenver.com
67
61
57
62
65
68
36
40
44 45 46
52 53
58
63
66
69
32
37
41
47
54
59
48
55
28
33
24
29
34
38
42
49
25
30
35
39
43
50
26
COURTESY OF
DEBORAH LASTOWKA
PUZZLES
1
13
16
19
17
20
21
2
3
4
14
5
6
7
8
15
18
22
COURTESY OF STREETROOTS
ANSWERS ARE ON PAGE 15
9
10 11 12
ACROSS
DOWN
1. Casual greeting
4. Runs in neutral
9. Crime boss
13. PC core
14. Plunder, old-style
15. Australian horse
ARTIST TALK WITH JASON MORAN
Jason Moran’s exhibition Bathing the Room with Blues, currently on view at MCA
Denver, presents artworks that celebrate jazz history and the importance of music and
performance in Black culture and American life. Hear about Moran’s journey as an artist
at this intimate event.
WHEN: Jan 15, doors at 5 p.m., talk at 6 p.m.
WHERE: The Holiday Theatre, 2644 W. 32nd St.
COST: $10 - $35
INFO: mcadenver.org/events
16. Bill of ___ (legislative
act punishing a person
or group without trial)
18. Chipped in
19. Trumpeter Armstrong
20. Like winter weather (but
not often in Portland)
22. Overwhelming emotion
23. ___ to oranges
25. More marshlike
27. British rule in
colonial India
28. Calendar square
30. Pasta toppings
31. Burgle
33. ___ chi (martial art)
35. Store posting (Abbr.)
36. Illicit trading
40. ___ Wednesday
41. Con opposite
42. “Absolutely!”
44. “Not a ___!”
47. Campaigner, for short
49. In-flight info, for short
51. Knight of the
Round Table
54. Sacrificial figure
56. Fraction of a joule
57. Autocrats of old
59. Native New Zealander
60. Accused’s need
62. Units of memory
64. Mixer
65. Flip over
66. Colony member
67. Graceful bird
68. Euripides drama
69. Sign before Virgo
1. Like time, speed,
and temperature
2. Satisfactory
3. Prearranged conspiracy
4. Opened or closed, as
a lens aperature
5. Animal house
6. Boys
7. Balances (out)
8. Goatlike mammal of Asia
9. Campbell’s container
10. Proposed Asian
language family
11. Tiny
12. Doctor’s ___
15. Guidepost
17. Afflict
21. Lavatory
24. Messenger bags
26. University president who
introduced the use of
standardized test scores
in Harvard admissions
29. Tibetan beast of burden
32. Sauvignon ___
34. Babysitter’s handful
37. Hardly a hedonist
38. Dadaist Jean
39. Stay dry
43. Compound used
in plastics
44. Soccer shoes
45. Vegetarian restaurant
on Hawthorne
46. Chest pain
48. Sorority letter
50. Blueblood, informally
52. Caulk on a wooden ship
53. Baloney
55. Beam of light
58. Husky burden
61. Container
63. Half and half
CATALYST SERIES FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE:
THE POWER OF STORYTELLING
In this interactive webinar, Kali Fajardo-Anstine will discuss her book, Sabrina & Corina, and
discuss storytelling as a way to retain history and promote social justice. Attendees will then
engage in an interactive creative writing activity, led by Fajardo-Anstine.
WHEN: Jan 20, 4 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
WHERE: Online
COST: Free, but participants must register online
INFO: socialwork.du.edu/events
January 2022 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
׉	 7cassandra://VAyf4Clm5XjgmlbGvb-ksbCfSd78xINwXwwX1GoE43Y%` aѱWQaѱWP
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://BVERknp1lKeQWMo5HX8_hRU2jeIFDwhpCsWx4a7Resg ` ׉	 7cassandra://WafWtzYTMGb1dGEXn6Q7EmsmqWA8bX7xwwKEBnfMYF4bE`q׉	 7cassandra://PK_y8rlyLnH7txbbV7GvqRI8MX9olp_p2_wd6culebQ u` ׉	 7cassandra://MDhEPSGdIFohiB09_4R8aMJSYcmKXRcCYPk6OXjlutQX~8͠TaֱWט 
 
u׉׉	 7cassandra://fy6MklFzA5itHq82kgiVChZXaa0AJG8uuz-ansRhlSo b` ׉	 7cassandra://NgspK2sGhhSD5LBj9aiF8eTOpdx8SeiRpJeLBzKt90Yh[`q׉	 7cassandra://NXsYJhyYqYYaKqJPvUpiv5ukPMcXZyLgJDCHP0GTgH0` ׉	 7cassandra://XyLCLZhm5rgmj_zfn0KSiqz3jGkeIkBjHEoqo1DKaFU @͠TaױW 4נaױW ~L9ׁHhttp://urbanpeak.orgׁׁЈנaױW J=9ׁH $http://urbanpeak.org/denver/programsׁׁЈנaױW 	3D9ׁHhttp://soxplace.comׁׁЈנaױW >ց̄9ׁH  http://seniorsupportservices.orgׁׁЈנaױW 	D9ׁHhttp://sfcdenver.orgׁׁЈנaױW .N9ׁHhttp://odmdenver.orgׁׁЈנaױW FY39ׁH (http://homelessassistance.us/li/lawrenceׁׁЈנaױW 	{i9ׁHhttp://holyghostchurch.orgׁׁЈנaױW ̢9ׁH $http://harmreductionactioncenter.orgׁׁЈנaױW 	jÁE9ׁHhttp://tgpdenver.orgׁׁЈנaױW f,9ׁHhttp://thoh.orgׁׁЈנaױW _J9ׁHhttp://citysquare.orgׁׁЈנaױW 		5e9ׁHhttp://attentionhomes.orgׁׁЈנaױW $̪9ׁH #mailto:contactah@attentionhomes.orgׁׁЈנaױW 	<فH9ׁHhttp://work-now.orgׁׁЈנaױW 9ׁHhttp://va.gov/findׁׁЈנaױW 	̝9ׁH #http://sunshinebehavioralhealth.comׁׁЈנaױW ~̨9ׁH 'http://coloradocoalition.org/healthcareׁׁЈנaױW T̛9ׁHhttp://saludclinic.org/commerceׁׁЈנaױW 	G߁̄9ׁH  http://liverhealthconnection.orgׁׁЈנaױW ߁̒9ׁHmailto:info@hepc-connection.orgׁׁЈנaױW ̢9ׁH $http://harmreductionactioncenter.orgׁׁЈנaױW jX9ׁHhttp://denverhealth.orgׁׁЈנaױW 7f9ׁH 0http://careercenteroffices.com/center/231/denverׁׁЈנaױW ]l9ׁHhttp://denverlibrary.org/ctcׁׁЈנaױW 7I9ׁHhttp://voacolorado.org/gethelpׁׁЈנaױW K9ׁHhttp://lovedenver.orgׁׁЈנaױW 7̸9ׁH )http://seniorsupportservices.org/programsׁׁЈנaױW 7aR9ׁHhttp://soallmayeat.orgׁׁЈנaױW &f9ׁHhttp://stpeterandmary.orgׁׁЈנaױW Vk9ׁHhttp://saintpauldenver.comׁׁЈנaױW D9ׁHhttp://sfcdenver.orgׁׁЈנaױW 7ˁn9ׁHhttp://stelizabethdenver.orgׁׁЈנaױW fn9ׁHhttp://odmdenver.org/homeׁׁЈנaױW w̲9ׁH &http://jordanamedenver.churchfoyer.comׁׁЈנaױW ^i9ׁHhttp://holyghostchurch.orgׁׁЈנaױW pFk9ׁHhttp://hislovefellowship.orgׁׁЈנaױW b9ׁHhttp://krishnadenver.comׁׁЈנaױW (̤9ׁH $http://facebook.com/ThePeoplesPicnicׁׁЈנaױW 89ׁH +http://feedingdenvershungry.org/events.htmlׁׁЈנaױW 2̆9ׁHhttp://frwoodyshavenofhope.orgׁׁЈנaױW 7̀9ׁHhttp://denverrescuemission.orgׁׁЈנaױW -m*9ׁHhttp://dicp.orgׁׁЈנaױW ,CX9ׁHhttp://mealsforpoor.orgׁׁЈנaױW J9ׁHhttp://citysquare.orgׁׁЈנaױW 7^9ׁHhttp://christinthecity.orgׁׁЈנaױW ׁN9ׁHhttp://christsbody.orgׁׁЈנaױW 7h9ׁHhttp://denvercathedral.orgׁׁЈנaױW X9ׁHhttp://mealsforpoor.orgׁׁЈנaױW j̝9ׁH %http://capitolheightspresbyterian.orgׁׁЈנaױW ̹9ׁHmailto:EDITOR@DENVERVOICE.ORGׁׁЈנaױW 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
John & Laurie Mcwethy Charitable Fund
$10,000+
Kenneth King Foundation
Denver Foundation
Max & Elaine Appel
The Christian Foundation
Rose Community Foundation - CMP
$5,000 - $9,999
CHFA Direct Effect
Anschutz Family Foundation
$1,000-$4,999
BNSF Railway Foundation
Jerry Conover
Bright Funds
Jill Haug
Key Renter Property Management
Meek-Cuneo Family Fund
Matthew Seashore & Nikki Lawson
Russell Peterson
Phoenix Capital, Inc.
Sustainable Housing and Development Foundation
Mary Walker
Walker Family Foundation
Pivotal Energy Partners
Whole Foods Foundation
Signs by Tomorrow
Michael Dino
Energy Outreach Colorado
SEI Giving Fund
Colorado Credit Union Foundation
Mr. Paul Manoogian
Josh Kauer
Creating Healthier Communities
Kroger
Network for Good
Charities Aid Foundation of America
Gaspar Terrana
Patrick Hagan
Jim Ashe
The Sidney B. & Caleb F. Gates Jr. Fund
Matthew Rezek
Patrick & Jan Rutty
Megan Arellano
Audrey Chumley
Donald Weaver
Christopher Boulanger
$500-$999
Betty & Warren Kuehner
Lighthouse Writer’s Workshop, Inc.
Community Health Charities
Dave and Julia Watson
Michelle Stapleton & James Thompson
Fire on Mountain
Paul Hoffman
Michael J. Fehn & Jan Monnier
Lori Holland
Jill Haug
Travis & Meggie Ramp
Alistair Davidson
Jim and Nancy Thomas
Jennifer Seybold
Sheryl and John H Parker
Susan B. Jones
Maggie Holben
Elsbeth Williams
Michael Vitco
Catherine Hegedus
Christine Muldoon and Pete Iannuzzi
James Stegman
3M Foundation
10X Business Consultants
SEMOptimize
Laura Wing
Eileen Di Benedetto
Katherine Standiford
Ridley Mcgreevey and Winocur
Charles and Jennifer Thornton-Kolbe
Jennifer Stedron
Stephen Saul
Matthew Deller
Erin Bowers
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!
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
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 January 2022
׉	 7cassandra://PK_y8rlyLnH7txbbV7GvqRI8MX9olp_p2_wd6culebQ u` aѱWR׉E#RESOURCE LIST
FOR HOMELESS INDIVIDUALS IN DENVER
DENVERVOICE.ORG/RESOURCE-LIST
DIAL 211 FOR A MORE COMPLETE LIST OF RESOURCES IN ENGLISH AND SPANISH. PROVIDES INFORMATION FOR FOOD, MEDICAL CARE, SENIOR SERVICES, YOUTH PROGRAMS,
COUNSELING, EDUCATION, SHELTERS, SUBSTANCE ABUSE, HOLIDAY ASSISTANCE, AND MORE. EMAIL EDITOR@DENVERVOICE.ORG WITH CORRECTIONS OR ADDITIONS.
FREE MEALS
AGAPE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 2501 California St., Sat., 11am
CAPITOL HEIGHTS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1100 Fillmore St., Sat. lunch at 11:30am capitolheightspresbyterian.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES Go to mealsforpoor.org for meal locations
CATHEDRAL OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION 1530 Logan St.; sandwiches & coffee Mon.-Fri. 8:30am
denvercathedral.org
CHRIST’S BODY MINISTRIES 850 Lincoln; Mon. closed, Tues.-Thurs. 10am-3pm, Fri. 8am-11pm; groceries &
hot meal on Sat. at 2pm (at 16th & York); Sun. church service at 6pm, dinner at 7pm. christsbody.org
CHRIST IN THE CITY Home-cooked meal; Civic Center Park at Colfax & Lincoln at 1pm every Wed. & 2nd Sat.
christinthecity.org
CITYSQUARE DENVER 303-783-3777, 2575 S. Broadway; Food pantry Tues. 10am-6pm citysquare.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES Hot meals served at 1820 Broadway (in front of Trinity United Methodist
Church), Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 11:45-12:15 mealsforpoor.org
DENVER INNER CITY PARISH 303-322-5733, 1212 Mariposa St., VOA Dining Center for Seniors, free 60 yrs and
older, Wed.-Sat. 9am-12pm. Food Bank, Wed.-Fri., tickets at 9am, food bank open 10am-12pm. dicp.org
DENVER RESCUE MISSION 1130 Park Avenue West, 3 meals 7 days/week: 5:30am, 12pm, 6pm 303-294-0157
denverrescuemission.org
FATHER WOODY’S HAVEN OF HOPE 1101 W. 7th Ave. 303-607-0855. Mon.-Fri. 7am-1pm. Not open weekends.
Breakfast is at 8am, and lunch is served at 11am frwoodyshavenofhope.org
FEEDING DENVER’S HUNGRY Food service on the second and fourth Thurs. of each month; locations found at
feedingdenvershungry.org/events.html
FOOD NOT BOMBS Wed. 4pm/Civic Center Park facebook.com/ThePeoplesPicnic
HARE KRISHNA TEMPLE 1400 Cherry St., free vegetarian feast on Sun., 6:45-7:30pm krishnadenver.com
HIS LOVE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH 910 Kalamath, community dinner on Thurs., 6-6:45pm, men’s breakfast 1st Sat.
of the Month, 8-10am, women’s breakfast 2nd Sat., 9-11am. hislovefellowship.org
HOLY GHOST CATHOLIC CHURCH 1900 California St., sandwiches, Mon.-Sat., 10-10:30am holyghostchurch.org
JORDAN AME CHURCH 29th and Milwaukee St., Tues. lunch 11:30am-1:00pm jordanamedenver.churchfoyer.com
OPEN DOOR MINISTRIES 1567 Marion St., Sat. morning breakfast: 8am, Sun. dinner (required church
attendance at 4:30pm) meal served at 6pm. 303-830-2201 odmdenver.org/home
ST. ELIZABETH’S Speer Blvd. & Arapahoe St. on Auraria campus, 7 days/week, 11:00am; food, coffee.
stelizabethdenver.org
ST. FRANCIS CENTER 2323 Curtis St., Wed. & Fri. 3-4:30pm (except third Wed. of each month). sfcdenver.org
ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN 1600 Grant St., Street Reach meal Mon. 1-4:30pm. Grocery room open at 11:30am every
Mon. saintpauldenver.com
ST. PETER AND ST. MARY 126 W. Second Ave., dinner at 6 on Tues. 303-722-8781 stpeterandmary.org
SAME CAFÉ 2023 E. Colfax Ave. Restaurant serving mostly organic food—not free, but pay what you can or
work off your meal in the kitchen: Open Mon.-Sat., 11am to 2pm, Closed Sun. & holidays, 720-530-6853
soallmayeat.org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES 846 E. 18th Ave. 3 meals, Mon.-Fri. 7am-7pm; Sun. 11am-4pm. 55+
seniorsupportservices.org/programs
URBAN OUTREACH DENVER 608 26th St., Thurs. dinners, 6pm-7pm lovedenver.org
VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA 2877 Lawrence St., breakfast (8am), lunch (11:30am), dinner (5pm) Mon.-Thurs.,
12pm on Fri., 1pm on Sun. Food & clothing bank 9:30am-4pm Mon.-Thurs.
voacolorado.org/gethelp-denvermetro-foodnutrition-themission
CAREER SERVICES
COMMUNITY TECHNOLOGY CENTER Level 4, Denver Central Library, 14th Ave. & Broadway. 720-865-1706.
Hours: Mon. & Tues. 10am-8pm; Wed., Thurs., Fri. 10am-6pm; Sat. 9am-5pm & Sun. 1-5pm; FREE services
include computer/internet use, wifi, computer classes, job search/resume classes and one-on-one tech help
appointments. denverlibrary.org/ctc
THE WESTSIDE ONE-STOP CAREER CENTER Denver Department of Human Services, 1200 Federal Blvd., Mon.Fri.,
7:30am-4:30pm; Services include: employment counseling, assisted job search, résumé preparation,
job/applicant matching, phone bank for calling employers, access to computers, copiers, fax, etc.
careercenteroffices.com/center/231/denver-westside-workforce-center
MEDICAL & DENTAL SERVICES
ACS COMMUNITY L.I.F.T. CareVan at Open Door Ministries, 1567 Marion St., Tues. 9am-12:30pm
DENVER HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER 303-436-6000, 777 Bannock St. denverhealth.org
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER 303-572-7800; 112 E. 8th Ave.; Mon.-Fri., 9am-12pm. HIV/Hep C/
Gonorrhea/ Chlamydia testing available. Our services are restricted to active IV Drug Users. Offers clean
syringes to active users, as well as safety training on how to properly dispose of dirty syringes.
harmreductionactioncenter.org
LIVER HEALTH CONNECTION 1325 S. Colorado Blvd., Suite B302. Resources and support for those affected by
Hep C. Free Hep C testing offered. 800-522-4372, info@hepc-connection.org, liverhealthconnection.org
INNER CITY HEALTH CENTER 303-296-1767, 3800 York St. Mon., Wed.-Fri. 8am-5pm; Tues. 9am-5pm;
Sat. 8am-2pm. Emergency walk-ins.
SALUD CLINIC 6075 Parkway Drive, Ste. 160, Commerce City; Dental 303-286-6755. Medical 303-286-8900.
Medical Hours: Mon.-Wed. 8am-9pm, Thurs.-Fri. 8am-5pm; Sat. (Urgent Care only) 8am-5pm;
Dental Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8am-5pm; Pharmacy Hours: Mon.-Fri. 1-5pm; After Office Hours: 1-800-283-3221
saludclinic.org/commerce-city
STOUT STREET CLINIC 303-293-2220, 2130 Stout St. Clinic hours for new and established patients: 7am-4pm
Mon., Tues., Thurs., & Fri. The clinic is open Wed. 11am-7pm. coloradocoalition.org/healthcare
SUNSHINE BEHAVIORAL HEALTH (YOUTH SERVICES) Services for youth facing substance abuse, addiction, mental
health disorders, or a combination of these conditions. 833-931-2484 sunshinebehavioralhealth.com
VA MEDICAL CENTER 303-399-8020, 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
January 2022 DENVER VOICE 15
DON’T LOOK NOW!
PUZZLES ARE ON PAGE 13
׉	 7cassandra://NXsYJhyYqYYaKqJPvUpiv5ukPMcXZyLgJDCHP0GTgH0` aѱWSaѱWR
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://KEhRmHndJ2yMCwOHhCZa3j2f_th6zTQ7ryPJli3WSNA <`׉	 7cassandra://Nhzs6ux2l5UodjW23mgZ15sqDKRmTqPcBK9-Uf5PI1Yg`q׉	 7cassandra://ctfjv9j3pfqe90-YyNCoySZt8pd9jQdgwfIC44GKWNs&` ׉	 7cassandra://qdbC-NhZxb5XhxZWU5VEcokL9-yHZFROTgqEwHtfueg n͠TaױWנaױW 9ׁHhttp://DENVERVOICE.ORG/DONATEׁׁЈ׉E>WHAT DO
WE DO
TO HELP?
Since 2007, the VOICE
has provided jobs for more
than 4,600 people
experiencing homelessness.
For every dollar we take in,
we put $3.00 directly
back into the pockets of
those who need it most.
WITH YOUR
HELP, WE CAN
DO MORE.
SCAN THIS CODE TO SET UP
YOUR DONATION TODAY!
DENVERVOICE.ORG/DONATE
׉	 7cassandra://ctfjv9j3pfqe90-YyNCoySZt8pd9jQdgwfIC44GKWNs&` aѱWT׈EaѱWUaѱWT
,1-2022afrJ²