Lakewood Informer

Resident generated news about Lakewood, Colorado

Lakewood Informer

Resident generated news about Lakewood, Colorado

Author : Lakewood News from Karen

Jefferson County Committed to DEI and Sanctuary Policies

From a resident with a question. Thanks for sharing! According to the Jefferson County website: https://www.jeffco.us/4887/Federal-Impact-Updates “In 2023 the county [Jefferson] received about $105 million in federal revenue from approximately 130 different awards. The county relies on these federal dollars to provide a broad range of critical services such as food assistance, early childhood education, highway safety, crime victim assistance, employment services, child support, medical assistance, emergency management, and preventative health services. Additionally, in 2023 we administered about $110 million in direct federal assistance to our community. Once our 2024 audit is complete, we will have more recent numbers.”  Question: Why are Jeffco County Commissioners risking the loss of $215 million dollars in essential federal funds to openly defy federal law by not cooperating with federal immigration law and an Executive Order to eliminate DEI offices?  County answer: “We will continue to provide essential services and resources to our community and are in the process of identifying strategies to do that in the event that we lose funding.”  In other words, RAISE OUR TAXES AGAIN.  Voters in Jefferson County were not allowed to vote on implementing DEI in the County nor could we vote on defying federal immigration law for the County to protect illegal immigrants nor vote on defying the DEI Executive Order. These decisions are the sole responsibility of the County Commissioners and their handlers. Please share any answers you hear from the county as to whether they will comply with federal direction in order to receive federal money.

The Bend Development Incomplete Site Plan

16 March, 2025 Thanks to a reader who provided new information, this post requires a major rewrite. Please stop reading now and stay tuned! What will Lincoln Property Company (LPC) do with the toxic landfill on The Bend development at 4th and Union? No one knows. One part of the property has development plans, including the area SOUTH of 4th Ave. This area is supposedly free of contamination and can be developed by following safety rules. The area NORTH of 4th Ave is where no development can occur because it wasn’t fully remediated, only covered with dirt. There has been no plan filed for this land so the site plan is incomplete. The city needs the plan for the entire parcel of land to design adequate resources and to reassure residents the area is safe. But if anyone knows the full site plans, Lakewood Informer can’t find them. Lakewood Informer filed an open records request for the site plan. Instead of supplying the document, the city said to get it online. To be fair, knowing where to find the documents yourself is a valuable tool for any government website, which always seems convoluted. The Urban Renewal application materials were posted for the meeting back in January. However, there was no site plan included.  (Thank you to the city staff who handle requests) Going to the eTRAKiT development site revealed no permits or projects for that parcel ID. There is obviously a site plan, pre-development application, development application, or whatever is applicable according to Lakewood property development steps. Lakewood and LPC have been working on this site for years. And perhaps there is a good reason why I can’t get the material myself online. But regardless, I do not have that information to share. Public statements from LPC confirm that they will decide what to do with that land later. They have acknowledged that there is no plan for land right now, even as a concept. How can the city approve a site plan that doesn’t include the entire site? How can the city let homes be developed across the street, literally, from an acknowledged environmental hazard site, without getting some kind of plan for that land? Aside from the safety factor to the people living there, the city needs a full site plan to develop adequate infrastructure. This site is anticipated to include almost 2,000 homes, which will impact traffic, water, fire and police resources. Are the resources currently being planned enough for the entire parcel? Or only half? Why not disclose the plans for the entire site?

Lakewood City Council approved a new land use scheme that overturns citizen initiative

From Save Open Space – Lakewood 2/24 Lakewood Mayor, Mayor Pro Tem, backed by dark money, continue City’s long history of choosing development over environment Council’s action threw out the wishes of over 8,000 community members who signed the Save Open Space Lakewood Green Initiative petition 2/24 Lakewood Council approved a new land use scheme reinstating a loophole that allows developers to pay a fee in lieu of land donation On February 24, 2025, Lakewood City Council voted to repeal and replace the citizens’ initiated Save Open Space Lakewood (SOS Lakewood) Green Initiative with City Hall’s anti-environmental, no-transparency, developer-friendly ordinance.  “The City’s vote reinstates the practice of back-door deals where fees are prioritized over parks and open spaces. It is also a slap in the face to petitioners whose pleas not only went unheard, but who also faced personal attacks by a well-orchestrated campaign against the initiative,” said Cathy Kentner, petition representative. At the heart of the initiative was eliminating the provision that allowed large developments to pay a fee-in-lieu of creating a one third acre or larger “pocket park.”  By wrongfully withholding building permits from projects that had already paid a fee and by wrongfully requiring land dedication for smaller projects, City Hall was successful in fabricating a “crisis” that they “heroically” solved. They used the “unintended consequences” suffered by the smaller projects to put back in place all of the problems that led to the initiative – back-door deal making and a scheme where paying a fee is always more of an incentive than providing the open space. And there is no oversight for even the largest of development projects. The irony is that the majority of city councilors boast their support for sustainability and parks but their actions enable corporate greed to rule. Or perhaps they are making good on unspoken promises to campaign donors.  More than half of the money spent to elect Mayor Pro-Tem Jeslin Shahrezaei to Council, or tens of thousands of dollars, came from the Metro Housing Coalition and the National Association of Realtors which, in 2020, apologized for its long-standing racist policies. In addition to being heavily funded by those same organizations, Mayor Wendi Strom was also supported by One Main Street Colorado, recently described in The Denver Post as a “dark money” group. Former Lakewood City Councilor, now State Representative Rebekah Stewart, received money from these same developer dark money groups. She has already sponsored two bills that favor developers and propose to make citizen initiatives more difficult. Speaking on behalf of Save Belmar Park, attorney Patricia Mellen said, “This ordinance experience has raised more questions than it has answered. What happened to the great oversight ideas from the study session a month ago? What happened to the ideas from last March? Why does the discretion and power always return to the staff? Why was the staff’s moratorium on building permits allowed when the City had months to create contingency plans about what would happen if the ordinance gathered enough votes? Why did the City staff not use waivers for affordable housing and single family homeowners? Why was a self-inflicted crisis the strategy? Save Belmar Park’s frustration is with the same issues in this ordinance that exist in the zoning ordinance where there is a lack of transparency, a lack of accountability, a lack of elected official oversight, a lack of public input, a lack of appeal options about decisions.” A Denver Post editorial (2/16) proclaimed “Lakewood’s Messy Fight Can Be Solved.”  But instead of finding a simple solution, as suggested by the Post, and instead of keeping their word to make amendments without changing the overall intent of the initiative, City Hall pulled a bait and switch, revealing a developer friendly ordinance that incentivises a fee in lieu in every case. Kentner said, “Instead of accepting responsibility for the chaos they had created, City Hall launched a campaign of misinformation to scapegoat the initiative for problems that they labeled ‘unintended consequences.’ The petition was falsely labeled ‘anti-growth,’ yet it was the City that withheld building permits, causing numerous people to suffer needlessly. The ordinance passed this week does not honor the wishes of many thousands of constituents who signed a petition asking the City Council to eliminate the option for developers to pay a fee instead of providing parkland and to apply it to all projects that haven’t already met the requirement. The default should be land dedication for parks and open spaces; not a fee that is many years old and is never commensurate with the price of the land. Oversight is not a ‘barrier’ to development. It is a ‘guardrail’ to big money corporations buying out of our land use requirements.” This week’s vote overturned the initiative, keeping none of the citizen requested provisions.

Council loosens green space mandates

From Denver Post, by John Aguilar, jaguilar@denverpost.com The Lakewood City Council has revamped a controversial land-use ordinance that city leaders hope will break a logjam for approval of badly needed housing projects. The measure, passed 8-0 by the council late Monday, is aimed at balancing a fervent desire by residents to preserve as much green space and parkland as possible in Colorado’s fifth-largest city with the need to create affordable homes in a region that is sorely lacking in residential units. Most notably, the city of 156,000’s new ordinance restores the ability of homebuilders to buy their way out of making land dedications in certain cases — a practice called fee-in-lieu. The change reverses the core of the original measure adopted by the council last fall that placed a clear emphasis on preserving green space in Lakewood. The council’s move Monday night also breathed renewed life into a controversial 411-unit apartment building that is slated for the east edge of Belmar Park, a project that was stymied by stricter land dedication rules adopted by the city last fall. That proposed project is what prompted the battle over how much green space to preserve in the city. Cathy Kentner, a Lakewood resident and former mayoral candidate who helped spearhead an effort last year to put a mandatory land dedication measure before voters, called the council’s overhaul of the legislation Monday a “bait and switch.” Read more…

Citizen Initiative Repealed

A quick update from Cathy Kentner Dear Friends of Lakewood, Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, City Council repealed our citizen initiative last night. They kept none of the requests from the petitioners. Thank you to everyone who made comments! Please stay involved and keep letting your voice be heard. The fact that the developer-funded establishment didn’t even let us vote on this issue is evidence that we are making good, valid points. The next thing coming up for the City as a whole is the comprehensive plan and zoning ordinance amendments. The next thing for the Belmar Park project is the Planning Commission hearing to approve the site plan, not yet scheduled but likely to be in April or May. Thank you, Cathy

Selena Quintanilla ‘Still Dreaming of You’ Art Show Returns After a Decade

From Chicano Humanities & Arts Council Celebrate Selena with Art, Music, Look-Alike Contest, and Custom Car Magic El Rey Artwork, in collaboration with the Chicano Humanities Arts Council (CHAC Gallery) and Creature Arcade Tattoo and Illustration is proud to announce the much-anticipated return of the Selena Quintanilla Art Show: “Still Dreaming of You”. This year’s event, held at CHAC Gallery at 40 West (7060 W. 16th Ave. Lakewood, CO 80214) on March 7th, April 4th, and April 5th, commemorates the 30th anniversary of Selena’s untimely passing and honors the Queen of Tejano Music with three unforgettable days of vibrant art, music, culture, and celebration. The event will feature stunning artwork by Denver’s finest artists, Selena-inspired tattoo flash, a look-alike contest, a karaoke competition, a Show & Shine car show, Aztec dancers, and a variety of mouthwatering food trucks. The festivities begin on Friday, March 7th, from 5:00 PM to 9:00 PM, with an exciting Opening Ceremony Art Show, including a captivating performance by the Aztec dance group Huitzilipotchli, storytelling, face painting, and fun crafts for kids. On April 4th and 5th, the celebration continues with the eagerly anticipated look-alike contest, tattoo flash event, and a high-energy Selena karaoke contest, with incredible prizes for the winners. The Viejitos Car Club will lead a procession of custom cars, culminating in a Show & Shine car show at the CHAC and Creature Arcade parking lot, where the state’s finest custom cars will be on display. Rob and Tammy Yancey founded this event ten years ago as a heartfelt tribute to Selena, aiming to bring together the Denver community to celebrate her lasting legacy. “Selena is an icon who represents resilience and embodies the beauty of our culture through her music and spirit,” says Rob & Tammy. “Though she may be gone in person, she will never be gone in spirit. Her legacy lives on in our hearts, and we’ll continue to honor her light.” This year marks the one of the largest events hosted at CHAC’s 40 West location, with the goal of uniting Colorado’s artistic communities while celebrating Selena’s enduring influence on music, culture, and art. So, get ready to show off your best Selena attire and perfect those karaoke moves and voices! Click the links to let us know you’ll be joining the celebration on March 7th and/or April 4 & 5. 

Belmar Park Traffic Study ignores traffic from over HALF of the planned housing units!

From SaveBelmarPark.com Here is more of the cloudy history from the strange Book of Belmar.  This has come to light due to the attention to detail provided by Kairoi’s excellent attorneys at the Brownstein law firm in their court filing with Jefferson County District Court. Please notice the map above.  The green area represents Belmar Park.  The two red blocks represent the two parcels of land that comprise the Irongate Office Complex.  The red square on the left is 777 S Yarrow Street.  The red rectangle on the right is 777 S Wadsworth Boulevard. The developer plans to build at least 411 apartments at 777 S Yarrow within the red square on the left. An additional 650-800 apartments are planned within the rectangle on the right at 777 S Wadsworth.   How will they construct so many units at 777 S Wadsworth?   By building TWO 12-STORY TOWERS. Two key points to consider. 1)  Kairoi always planned to develop BOTH Irongate parcels.  Namely, 777 S Yarrow Street and 777 S Wadsworth Blvd shown above. This point is established by numerous statements in the legal brief filed on behalf of the developer including that Kairoi submitted a formal letter of intent to purchase both properties way back on October 9, 2020. The two parcels are conveniently located directly across the street from each other and are both part of the Irongate office complex as shown on the map above. Yet incredibly, the developer has succeeded in excluding the S Wadsworth location from consideration by the public or Lakewood’s Planning Department or Lakewood’s Planning Commission or Lakewood’s City Council or the Colorado Department of Transportation!  Wow!   On December 2, 2020, both the seller and Kairoi signed a letter of intent for Kairoi to purchase the TWO properties. Lakewood was also in the loop even back then. On December 14, 2020, the City of Lakewood provided a formal zoning verification to Kairoi for the two properties. In addition to the 777 S Yarrow location, as per page 6 of the court filing, Kairoi has always planned to construct multiple 12-story towers on the S Wadsworth site with 650-800 total housing units at that location.  There has been no change to that plan. And since they are only proposing 411 units at the S Yarrow address, the majority of the units Kairoi plans to build at Irongate are not yet included in their major site plan or TRAFFIC STUDY since 650-800 units so far have been excluded.   Those 650-800 excluded units are over half of the project and Kairoi has succeeded in keeping that fact quiet.  Nobody is talking about that elephant in the room. So let’s move on to the second key point. 2)  Kairoi has NEVER included the 777 S Wadsworth site in traffic planning.   Read more…

Lakewood City Council to decide fate of policy affecting Belmar Park, other developments

From Save Open Space Lakewood The saga over the future of the Belmar Park project could be nearing its final chapter depending on the outcome of the Lakewood City Council meeting Monday, February 24, at 7pm in Council Chambers. Council will vote on whether or not to repeal and replace the citizens’ initiated Save Open Space Lakewood (SOS Lakewood) Green Initiative with City Hall’s anti-environmental, no-transparency, developer-friendly ordinance. Lakewood, like many communities, adopted an ordinance requiring developers of large residential projects to dedicate a portion of land to the City for parks and open space. Lakewood’s first version was in 1983. Then in 2018 the ordinance was updated to encourage more such donations. A separate provision also was adopted, requiring the code to be reviewed “by December 31, 2023.”  That date came and went without the required review, despite the outcry from the community that no such dedications had occurred since 2013. Between 2013 and 2023, City Council heard from multiple neighborhoods that opposed Lakewood’s relentless drive to become a concrete city. They expressed concerns over problem developments with little or no green space, all of which had paid a fee in lieu of property dedication. Community members were appalled when they learned that Lakewood had secretly ushered through approval of a behemoth luxury apartment building adjacent to Belmar Park. For months, they approached Council asking for the development to be modified and for months their pleas were ignored. As a result, the SOS Lakewood Green Initiative was launched in March, 2024. At the center of that initiative was the requirement that new developments could no longer donate a fee in lieu of parkland dedication. As the petition gained momentum, in the final days of the Colorado State Legislature session, an 11th-hour amendment to HB 24-1313 was added to mandate a fee option, creating an obvious legal challenge to the petition. The initiative garnered over 8,000 signatures, enough to qualify for a city-wide election. The issue was expected to go to ballot but the counting process was rushed. A Special Meeting was hastily called for Monday, November 4, the night before the presidential election, ensuring the initiative attracted little attention.  At that meeting, instead of setting a ballot date, Council passed the ordinance with a disingenuous vote. After passing the citizen initiative that night, Mayor Wendi Strom told the press…”the outcome will ultimately end up being decided in court.” Why would the Mayor be so confident that the matter would end up in court? Apparently Council knew that if they voted, the proposal likely would be approved and then challenged in court. However, mailing a ballot to every voter would increase visibility and likely increase support for the petition. The City fears public opinion is so strong for parks and open space that even their own pro-development machine could not stop it. But Council could, and did, prevent a city-wide vote. On December 20 developer Kairoi Residential filed a lawsuit questioning the initiative’s effect on their proposed development adjacent to Belmar Park. Kairoi’s case stands on “wobbly legs,” according to Colorado Municipal League (CML) Executive Director Kevin Bommer, who added, “Local control is local control, whether it comes from the governing body or whether it comes from the residents through the initiative process.” CML represents 271 Colorado communities.  To date the City has not taken any steps to support the ordinance. Kairoi’s motion for preliminary injunction went unopposed, leaving the judge with only one side to consider. Instead of using the court to decide the law, the City seems to be using it to do their political bidding.  Instead of accepting responsibility for the chaos they had created, City Hall launched a campaign of misinformation to scapegoat the initiative for problems that they labeled “unintended consequences.” The petition was falsely labeled “anti-growth,” yet it was the City’s withholding of building permits that caused numerous people to suffer needlessly. The irony is that the majority of city councilors say they support sustainability and parks but their actions allow corporate greed to rule. Or perhaps it is making good on unspoken promises to campaign donors.  More than half of the money spent to elect Mayor Pro-Tem Jeslin Shahrezaei came from the National Association of Realtors and Metro Housing Coalition, organizations known for supporting Republicans and corporate Democrats. In addition to being heavily funded by these same groups with admitted racist histories, the Mayor was supported by One Main Street Colorado, recently described in The Denver Post as a “dark money” group. A Denver Post editorial (2/16/25) proclaimed “Lakewood’s Messy Fight Can Be Solved.” But instead of finding a simple solution, as suggested by the Post, and instead of keeping their word to make amendments without changing the overall intent of the initiative, City Hall pulled a bait and switch, revealing a developer-friendly ordinance that incentivizes a fee in lieu in every case. According to Cathy Kentner of SOS Lakewood, the ordinance under consideration for Monday night, “Places the decision whether or not to accept a fee in lieu behind closed doors without any oversight. It’s even worse than the previous version because one administrator, working only with the developer, can not only decide the fee in lieu but would be allowed to lower or eliminate the fee if the developer convinced them it was worthwhile. This is all with no public outreach and no oversight.”  She added, “City Council CAN and arguably SHOULD solve their manufactured crisis. But the current proposal does nothing to solve the underlying problem. For more than a dozen years, no land dedications have occurred. Irresponsible, unsustainable, unaffordable housing is being built without any oversight. Oversight is not a “barrier” to housing. It is a “guardrail” to big money corporations buying out of our land use requirements.”

No Workforce Housing for Lakewood

Another Lakewood misinformation campaign bites the dust. For years Lakewood has been pushing high-density growth in the name of “affordable housing”. They market this narrative to schoolteachers and civil servants. See Lakewood’s recent resolution using these exact words. However, a development presentation to the Lakewood Planning Commission introduced a new term that exposes the lie: Workforce housing Workforce Housing The consultant Lakewood hired to evaluate blight and Lakewood’s Comprehensive Plan pointed out that there was NO PLAN for increasing workforce housing in Lakewood. The emphasis on “affordable housing”, despite what Lakewood says, is different from workforce housing. No matter how poorly teachers and civil servants get paid, they get paid more than anyone living on the streets. Affordable housing in Lakewood will mean a government-run program, similar to what used to be called Section 8. That is not the same as an answer to inflated housing prices for low- to median-income levels. Think about government-run affordable housing like a scholarship system for school. A person may need the financial assistance, and may not be able to go to college without it, but there are others who need it more and not enough to go around. For decades, the people most in need are those with extremely low income. Not low. Not middle-low. Not teachers and civil servants. Extremely low income. Ann Ricker, of Ricker Cunningham, is Lakewood’s blight consultant. She pointed out there was a gap in the Comprehensive Plan. She said the plan talked about affordable housing, and it talked about single-family housing, but she said there was the missing middle. She suggested removing “single-family” and just using the term “housing”. Using the general term “housing” would allow more high-density, market rate apartments to be built in an effort to flood the market and lower prices. Lakewood is already proceeding with this plan. There is no guarantee the low-priced condos or townhomes will be built anywhere. The term “workforce housing” is a more accurate description of how the public perceives the promises from Lakewood. This was an important acknowledgment that “workforce housing” is different than “affordable housing”. The public should be aware of the word games going on, similar to “illegal alien” versus “migrant”. Watch Ann Ricker discuss the Comprehensive Plan here: From Frank Lehnerz, Free State Colorado “If the government tries to wage war against the laws of the market by price control, it undermines the working of the market mechanism and leads to conditions which, from the point of view of the government itself, are less desirable than the previous state of affairs it intended to alter.” — Ludwig Von Mises, Human Action (1949) History has repeatedly shown that price controls—whether on food, housing, or other essentials—create virtually no consumer benefits and only price distortions. By capping what producers or retailers can charge, these controls reduce supply, reduce product or service quality, discourage investment for new, improved, or cheaper products and services, and create market signal distortions.

Scroll to top