Lakewood Informer

Resident generated news about Lakewood, Colorado

Lakewood Informer

Resident generated news about Lakewood, Colorado

permit

Lakewood Still Dodging Hearing on Shelter Permit

In another example of Lakewood manipulating the rules, there appears to be no intention to get a special use permit to operate the newly renovated Navigation Center.

Under 2025 zoning rules, a homeless shelter requires a special use permit. Such permit requires a public hearing. The Navigation Center “extreme weather” shelter bypassed this requirement through the “emergency” ordinance, even though there was plenty of time to anticipate winter.

Winter comes every year after all.

In the 2026 zoning ordinance, Lakewood removed the requirement for a special use permit.

Lakewood is Laughing At Us

The May 7th Planning Commission meeting was a travesty of a public hearing. Lakewood cared enough to give residents an outlet for their grievances. No one cared enough to enact a single change. And sometimes they outright laughed at us. Watch the video below from the end of public comment, starting at min 2:58:25. One resident got up and publicly read an article from the Lakewood Informer. Watch the city staffer seated in the background unsuccessfully hiding her laughter during this reading. All of which was proved to be true. All of which city staff ignored and the entire Planning Commission dismissed — just like so many other valid resident points. The meeting started with Lakewood Chief of Sustainability and Community Developer Travis Parker explaining that he didn’t think this meeting wouldn’t change anything. He said that there were “pretty significant misunderstandings” of what staff could do. He said that “attacks on staff for being, you know, incompetent or malfeasant or acting in bad faith, demonstrate a fundamental misunderstanding of the good and hard work that’s done by people that are experts.” No one doubts city staff work hard. They all deserve thanks. But we also can’t assume they are always right and the residents are wrong about everything. We can’t assume that there is no other way to evaluate base assumptions. But that’s exactly what the Planning Commission decided to do. Ironically, one of the main points of the Belmar Park battle was about cutting down all the trees that could have formed an expanded buffer. Mr Parker himself has been educating residents on new zoning codes from Lakewood that will not increase the setbacks to what they were pre-2012, but will now require RESIDENTS to get a permit to cut down their trees. So the meeting was a pretty show that started and ended with all the well-researched points the residents brought forward being dismissed. Sadly, the best thing to be said is that being dismissed was more respectful than being laughed at. Required Grading Permit – Evidence not reported by city staff The permit pictured above is from Lakewood’s eTRAKit system, showing the grading permit that was applied for and received within one day of the complaint, just as reported by Steve at savebelmarpark.com The permit below is for demolition, which was applied for a month earlier. No malicious intent was implied and the problem was quickly corrected. Thanks to residents who apparently know less than city staff. Grading permit requirements below Actual permit that must be displayed before construction:

Relevant facts withheld from Planning Commission regarding unpermitted demolition

From SaveBelmarPark.com Greetings Supporters of SaveBelmarPark.com, The 777 S Yarrow project was approved by Lakewood’s Planning Commission by a lockstep vote of 5-0 on May 7, 2025. Despite in-person and online expert testimony and informed and articulate personal testimony from hundreds of citizens who raised a wide range of serious issues and potential violations of the Zoning Ordinance that will never be addressed or mitigated by the current proposal, the commissioners still approved the proposal. If it is possible for a planning commission to be replaced by artificial intelligence software, this might be a good place to start a proof of concept.  Maybe even remote-controlled rubber stamps would suffice. At one point, ‘Mr.’ Buckley asked about the grading in the park.  As you may know, the city claims the park will not be touched.  That is a false claim.  As the city engineer admitted, it is necessary to grade park property so the developer does not have to build a retaining wall.  You are not supposed to build a retaining wall within 10 feet of the property line in Lakewood.  So it would not be feasible to require the developer to stay on their own property since they would have to modify their site plan to build a retaining wall with a proper setback. So Mr. Buckley asked what the grade change difference would be and was told only 2 feet. No big deal, right?  However, the developer’s site plan shows the floor of the building at 5,528.75 feet.  The park path adjacent to the graded area is at 5,518.  Guess what?  That is more than a 10 foot difference in elevation.  Not 2 feet.  The fire road is at 5,524 which is a 6 foot difference.  But none of that matters.  Because facts don’t seem to matter to the Planning Commission.  They can simply be ignored and replaced will false statements such as telling the public that the park won’t be touched.  Problem solved. This type of deceptive behavior is rooted in the history of land development.  Look at Stanford University.  When Leland and Jane Stanford passed away, they left 8,000 acres of land to the university with the provision it could never be sold. Yet visitors to Palo Alto, CA who visit the Stanford campus are amazed at all the development on that 8,000 acres that supposedly could never be sold.  How did developers and the university get around that seemingly ironclad restriction?  Enter the 99 year lease!  Stanford leases their land which has allowed all manner of development including residential, retail, you name it.  Just as if it had been sold.  Maybe Leland Stanford got railroaded on that! Similarly, May Bonfils did not envision the abuse and exploitation that would occur with her property at 777 S Yarrow Street after her passing. (And coincidentally, Planning Commissioner Overall is a Stanford grad.)   In a previous update, I mentioned the possibility the developer would bring attorneys or other advocates to put a positive spin on their proposal.  However, they did not make any attempt to put a positive spin on their project.  But to their credit, they also readily re-confirmed the project plans to provide only market priced rental units with no affordable units other than what the market will bear. Perhaps they already knew there was zero chance of not gaining approval from their supportive anti-science minions on the planning commission. Commissioners warmly welcomed the few supporters they obviously knew who showed up.  Yet addressed an accomplished PhD conservation biologist from Cornell and CSU who visited the site and the park and created an excellent presentation as ‘Mr’ Pardo. And after years of working on this project, who did the commission turn to for the ridiculously obvious question – how much does bird resistant glass cost?  Not the planning staff.  Not the developer.  Such an obvious question was apparently above their pay grade.  They expected Dr. Pardo to have done their homework for them.  He offered to follow-up on that. During the hearing, the commissioners asked specifically whether the demolition of 777 S Yarrow was properly permitted because various citizens were aware it was not and commented to that effect. They were assured by staff with Mr. Parker present that there were no problems with permitting and were not told that demolition began without being properly permitted. In fact, staffers denied that there were any issues with permitting.   I initially reported about the improper permitting and subsequently the Lakewood Informer carried that report and subsequently a portion of the Informer reprint was read back to the commissioners during the hearing.  They disparaged the report as something unreliable from a ‘blog’ and terminated the conversation. The city and Planning Commission should issue a public apology for that disparagement, inability to manage the permitting process and refusal to consider relevant facts on the matter brought to their attention by citizens during the hearing. Instead, they were not told a required grading permit (as shown above) was not issued until a citizen complained that it had not been issued. They were not told even the most minimal erosion control measures such as straw socks and tire shakers were not installed until after a citizen complained via a ticket in Lakewood’s user.govoutreach system. As per the image above, the very FIRST requirement specified by the developer’s own Kimley-Horn engineers is the grading permit which was never even requested until a citizen raised the issue. They were not told demolition continued for a period of time without any erosion control measures in place in contravention of Kimley-Horn recommendations and without a required grading permit as specified in the image above. This happened in early March.  It has been two months and the commissioners apparently were not aware of this breach. But they were at the ready to disparage accurate reports of it that were brought in to the public hearing. We predict no action will be taken regarding the unpermitted start of demolition, lack of even minimal erosion control measures and failure

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