Disaster scenario for Cherry Creek Dam weighed

By John Aguilar
The Denver Post

AURORA — A failure at the Cherry Creek Dam would inundate the heart of the Denver area with a torrent of deadly water, putting more than 280,000 people, nearly 39,000 structures, and $14 billion of land and property in jeopardy.

That nightmare scenario is why federal officials are taking steps to assess the safety of the 140-foot-high earthen dam on the border of Denver and Aurora and lay out ways — such as raising the dam, building a second spillway or adding more relief wells — to make it safer.

(Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file)

On Saturday, the Army Corps of Engineers will take its Dam Safety Modification Study for Cherry Creek Dam to the public to get feedback on how to move forward.

Another meeting was held Thursday night.

John Palensky, the Army Corps’ Cherry Creek Dam safety-study manager, said any risk associated with the 65-year-old dam is because it is perched over a densely packed urban corridor, not because of problems with its structural integrity.

In other words, he said, “the risk is skewed by the consequences.” Continue reading

No Vote, No Trial, No Citizen Input On Hentzell Park

By Charles C. Bonniwell, The Glendale Cherry Creek Chronicle June 2014

For over two years Denver park advocates who formed the entity Friends of Denver Parks have attempted to assert the rights of citizens of Denver as guaranteed by the Denver City Charter and the Colorado State Constitution to vote on matters critical to them and in particular on whether Mayor Michael Hancock could simply trade away 11 acres of open space land for development at Hentzell Park for a rundown office building in downtown Denver.

The city, led by Assistant City Attorney David Broadwell, has blocked all efforts for citizens to have that say. First he claimed that Denver City Charter Sec. 2.4.5., that requires “approval of a majority of registered voters” for the sale or lease of any park or any portion of any park, does not apply since it had not officially been designated a park not withstanding all appearances to the contrary, and even prior statements by the Mayor of Denver in 1979 that the property was “dedicated park land.”

When parks advocates sufficiently gathered signatures under their right of referendum and initiative as seemingly guaranteed by of the City Charter Sec. 8.3.1 and the State Constitution, Broadwell instructed the City Clerk and Recorder Debra Johnson to reject the petitions. He claimed that the swap was an administrative not a legislative action and that vitiated any right of the citizens on the matter.

Municipal law experts noted that the City Clerk and Recorder position was deliberately made by the City Charter as a separately elected officer so not to be under the control of the Mayor of Denver directly or indirectly through the City Attorney. Nonetheless, Johnson took the instructions from Broadwell and rejected the petitions.

Read complete article here

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: FRIENDS OF DENVER PARKS CHALLENGES JUDGE STERN’S RULING

Dear Friends,
On May 23, 2014 Friends of Denver Parks, Steve Waldstein, and Zelda Hawkins filed their Motion for Post-Trial Relief. The motion asks Judge Herbert L. Stern III to reverse his previous order granting summary judgment for the City and DPS, and re-schedule the case for trial.
Copies of the Motion and Exhibits are attached. It may be of interest to you that DPS produced a “smoking gun” document in discovery in which both Defendants acknowledged that Hampden Heights North Park is a Park. The document is Exhibit 3 attached to the motion.
Once again, thanks to all of you and to Russ Jones of Benson & Case for his fine work on the brief.
We will see where this adventure leads next. Look for Friends of Denver Parks to continue this fight in the courts, and to launch a ballot initiative to protect all Denver parks in the near future.
Love and courage, John
John Case

BENSON & CASE, LLP

Documents are published here:

May 23 2014 Motion For Post Trial Relief