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Archive for the 'Steve Bach' Tag

Olympic celebration planned downtown July 27

May 18th, 2012, 9:19 am by

The city just issued this press release:

As American athletes get ready to represent our country in London, Colorado Springs citizens here in “Little London” will don red, white and blue in support of Team USA at the Olympic Downtown Celebration from 4-10 p.m., Friday, July 27. The free event will coincide with NBC’s broadcast of the Olympic Games Opening Ceremony in London, which will be shown on a 15- by 27-feet high-definition video screen at the intersection of Colorado and Tejon, right in front of the U.S. Olympic Committee headquarters building. Event details will be announced at today’s Olympic Family Luncheon, sponsored by the Colorado Springs Sports Corporation.

“The Downtown Olympic Celebration will be a great way to celebrate together as a community how very fortunate we are to be home to the United States Olympic Committee, U.S. Paralympics and 22 Olympic national governing bodies,” said Mayor Bach. “Many of the athletes competing in London will have trained here at some point in their careers and we look forward to cheering them on as they compete at the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.”

While the Opening Ceremony broadcast is tentatively slated to start at 6 p.m. Mountain Time (NBC will announce official start time later this summer), the party will kick off a full two hours earlier at 4 p.m. with a variety of family-friendly entertainment that will continue throughout the night. All events are free, and will include:

  • Two entertainment stages, featuring music, performances and interviews with local celebrities, including Olympians and Paralympians from past Games
  • Autograph sessions with Olympians and Paralympians
  • Maximum Velocity, a high-flying BMX performance stunt team
  • Flying Aces All-Stars, Olympic and world champions acrobatic athletes performing some of the coolest trampoline tricks around
  • Synthetic “Ice” Rink in July, featuring interactive events and complimentary skate use from U.S. Figure Skating, USA Hockey and USA Curling – all in the middle of the street!
  • Miniature tennis court for kids’ play with U.S. Tennis Association
  • Children’s Gravity Play Area, complete with inflatable slides, portable climbing walls and more (at no charge!)
  • Interactive sport activities with the U.S. National Guard.

The evening will be capped off with a very special Colorado Springs torch lighting that coincides with the lighting of the official Olympic torch in London.

Olympians Kristi Yamaguchi (figure skating) and Bret Hedican (hockey), who met at the 1992 Winter Games in Albertville and married in 2000, will represent U.S. athletes as they light the local torch. Yamaguchi is the 1992 Olympic ladies figure skating champion, a best-selling author, philanthropist and a winner of the popular Dancing with the Stars television show. Hedican won the 2006 Stanley Cup with the NHL Carolina Hurricanes and is a TV sports analyst covering the NHL San Jose Sharks. They have two daughters, Keara Kiyomi, 8, and Emma Yoshiko, 6.

And finally, what celebration is truly complete without fireworks? The festivities will close with a breathtaking fireworks display off a downtown rooftop.

The event is primarily funded by the Downtown Development Authority with support from the U.S. Olympic Committee and the Colorado Springs Sports Corporation. For information, visit www.springsgov.com/olympic.

Mayor wants to fund college scholarships

May 18th, 2012, 6:48 am by

Mayor Steve Bach announced Thursday that money raised from the Mayor’s Cup will be used to fund college scholarships.

Organizers raised about $55,000. That’s about $15,000 more than the fundraising goal.

“One of the great things that will come from this is we want to create scholarships for young people in Colorado Springs who need financial help to go to college and who will consider a career in city government, especially in public safety,” Bach said.

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Colorado Attorney General loses $1 million — sort of

May 18th, 2012, 6:32 am by

Colorado Attorney General John Suthers had a chance to win $1 million during the Mayor’s Cup golf tournament at The Broadmoor May 18.

Suthers, along with three others, drew a golf ball signed by Mayor Steve Bach, making him eligible to win one million bucks if he nailed a hole in one.

But Suthers didn’t even come close to winning. In fact, the ball ended up in the water.

Suthers shouldn’t feel too bad. The other golfers didn’t come close either.

“That was the easiest $1 million they ever kept,” he said, laughing.

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City pools set to open Memorial Day weekend

May 15th, 2012, 11:48 am by

How does Memorial Day weekend at the beach sound?

Thanks to a new partnership between the city of Colorado Springs and the YMCA of the Pikes Peak Region, it sounds sure-enough.

On May 26, right before the unofficial start of summer, the Y will open the manmade beach at Memorial Park as well as the Monument Valley, Portal and Wilson Ranch outdoor pools. The Y will take over operation of the Memorial Park and Cottonwood Creek recreation centers on May 26, too.

“We’re thrilled to partner with the YMCA of the Pikes Peak Region to open the City’s pools for families to enjoy,” Kim King, the city’s parks administration manager, said Tuesday in an email.

“May 26 is going to be the start of a great summer in Colorado Springs,” she said.

The partnership with the Y is part of an effort by Mayor Steve Bach to save taxpayers money. Under contract, the city will subsidize the Y for any year-end shortfall “to the point of a break-even status,” but the Bach administration hopes the subsidy will shrink over the years.

The “YMCA of the Pikes Peak Region brings a lot of expertise in operating successful swimming and recreation centers,” King said.

The Colorado Springs Swim School had signed a five-year agreement with the city to operate the Memorial Park rec center and the Portal and Wilson Ranch outdoor pools in 2010. In November, the city terminated that agreement, citing breach of contract following a dispute over the repayment of utilities.

The Y is charging between $5 and $7 for day passes for kids ages 10 and under and between $7 and $9 for adults at the various city-owned facilities. The fees are between .50 cents and $1 more than what the city or the swim school had charged in the past.

Day passes for families will continue to be $25 at each of the facilities.

Unlike the swim school or what the city charged at the Cottonwood Creek rec center, the Y will not offer seniors a discounted rate.

Y members will be able to use the two recreation centers at no additional charge. But season passes for the other aquatic facilities for Y members are $120 for an individual (ages 11 and up) and $175 for a family.

Season passes for non-Y members are $300 for individuals and $450 for families.

The season starts May 26 and runs until about Labor Day, if not longer, depending on the weather.

Monthly memberships to the Y range from $26 for youth to $98 for adults.

The Y offers financial assistance for memberships.

Rivera: No-tax pledge makes stormwater options hard

May 14th, 2012, 12:26 pm by

Photo by Daniel J. Chacón

Former Mayor Lionel Rivera says the city has “plenty of options” to fund stormwater, which the city has largely put off since the City Council put a bullet between the eyes of the Stormwater Enterprise.

But one of the options suggested by Rivera — a tax increase — probably won’t see the light of day.

That’s because Mayor Steve Bach signed a no-tax pledge before he was elected.

Bach has sounded the alarm on the city’s half-billion-dollar stormwater needs and wants the City Council to look for inefficiencies at Colorado Springs Utilities to help pay for them.

Stormwater is responsibility of the city government that’s placed under the authority of the mayor.

“There are plenty of options, but difficult ones if you pledged not to support a tax increase,” Rivera said in an email.

Of all the City Council members who ran for office last year, only Councilwoman Angela Dougan signed the pledge, which was issued by the Colorado chapter of Americans for Prosperity.

The previous council eliminated the Stormwater Enterprise in December 2009 following the passage of ballot Issue 300. The vote was 5-4. Rivera was among the four council members who opposed eliminating the enterprise.

Here is the full text of Rivera’s email, with a few minor edits:

The mayor, with the support of City Council, can put a stormwater department in place with a similar fee as the enterprise and accomplish it through the legislative process. It wouldn’t be an enterprise, but it would subject to TABOR.

He could ask the City Council to develop a rate structure through (Colorado Springs Utilities) to support paying  for stormwater infrastructure. Even if there are cost savings that could pay for stormwater, he would have to advocate using the cost savings verses reducing rates.

If a small mill levy is the answer, then he would have to advocate for a tax increase.

The only way to get this done without a fee or tax increase is to grow municipal revenues or create efficiencies of $16 million annually in the municipal budget. I use $16 million because that is what the SWE fee generated.

If City Council can squeeze some savings from CSU and agree to cover some of the costs, then they would need to have a rate hearing to create the tariffs to justify and use the funds. The public would probably view this as a rate increase.

There are plenty of options, but difficult ones if you pledged not to support a tax increase.

Hickenlooper coming to Colorado Springs this week

May 14th, 2012, 8:44 am by

Gov. John Hickenlooper is traveling to Colorado Springs this week.

The governor is scheduled to meet with Colorado Springs Mayor Steve Bach and other members of the Pikes Peak Region Mayors Caucus on Friday.

The group will discuss issues affecting the region.

The meeting will be at 2 p.m. at the Penrose House Conference Center.

“This meeting is a direct result of a meeting that the Caucus held with Governor Hickenlooper in March,” according to the mayor’s office.

During the meeting, Hickenlooper will also sign HB12-1108, a transportation-related bill.

According to the mayor’s website:

“The Pikes Peak Region Mayors Caucus is patterned after Denver Mayor Hancock’s Mayors Conference. Mayor Bach attended the conference and found it to be a very effective way to bring community leaders together to get things done. He stressed they are not a committee – they are an action group who have come together to get things done.”

In addition to Bach, other members of the caucus include El Paso County Commissioner Amy Lathen, Teller County Commissioner Jim Ignatius, Manitou Springs Mayor Marc Snyder, Palmer Lake Mayor Nicki McDonald, Fountain Mayor Jeri Howells, among others.

 

Bach: ‘The day of reckoning is in front of us’

May 11th, 2012, 12:33 pm by

UPDATE: Stormwater is a municipal government obligation. While Mayor Steve Bach has said that city staff is looking for efficiencies within the existing budget to help pay for stormwater improvements, the mayor has not laid out a specific plan on how to pay for them.

The City Council is under pressure to come up with a funding mechanism to pay for Colorado Springs’ massive stormwater needs, which the city has largely put off since voters demanded an end to the Stormwater Enterprise more than two years ago.

While the contentious issue resurfaces from time to time, City Attorney Chris Melcher warned city officials in March that stormwater required immediate attention, especially since a permit to build the Southern Delivery System water pipeline was at stake.

Melcher presented Mayor Steve Bach and council members five options, including making stormwater a responsibility of Colorado Springs Utilities, which is building the 62-mile pipeline between Pueblo and Colorado Springs, and asking voters to pass a tax.

The mayor and council agreed in March to continue the discussion in 90 days.

Since then, the Board of Pueblo County Commissioners, which issued the so-called 1041 permit to build SDS, wrote a letter asking that Colorado Springs take immediate action.

During his monthly press conference on Tuesday, the mayor stressed the importance of addressing the city’s unfunded stormwater capital needs, which are estimated at a half-billion dollars.

Here’s the video:

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Czelatdko calls Bach’s downtown team ‘shortsighted’

May 11th, 2012, 10:44 am by

City Councilwoman Lisa Czelatdko, who represents downtown, is giving Mayor Steve Bach’s Downtown Solutions Team a piece of her mind.

Czelatdko sent the group the following email:

I wanted to thank those of you who give up your time, your money, your mornings, your weekends in order to improve upon downtown Colorado Springs.

I think that the intentional exclusion of the legislative body of this City, the absence in representation of a young professional, and poor output of communication, is extremely shortsighted on the part of the downtown solutions team.

I hear directly from citizens and business owners what they like and dislike about downtown. They want action and they want leaders who are willing to cooperate, recognize the existing value in this community, support projects that will enhance, and have the courage to implement changes. If you do not see that willingness then I ask you to use your influential voices and get them out of the city, out of leadership, and off boards.

The recent recommendation from the transit solutions team is to remove FREX. Where is our regional thinking? *Please see video below of Hickenlooper commenting on COS and how successful communities recognize the positive impacts a comprehensive transportation system has on a City.  Their recommendation removes the only connection other than interstate between COS and Denver.  It will put more drivers on the road putting an additional strain on an already compromised infrastructure. Professionals may have to move out. No options were discussed with the State for funding, nor County, or even discussed with the PPRTA board which actually provides the funding. Council heard at the presentation that with the extra funding  “we can possibly improve local routes”.  There is no guarantee to improve fixed routes locally because transit is not a priority for this administration.  Last year, I was the Council member who advocated for additional money for streets and to increase the weekday transit so people could get home from their job shifts. It failed.  Council was told publicly that for 2012, administration would look at additional sales tax revenues coming in and funding for improved transportation could be discussed.  Those additional funds have supposably been spent already. Council could and should in my opinion, bring forward an appropriation for increased fixed routes.  Unfortunately, it has been confirmed legally and reminded often, that appropriated funds can not direct City administration to implement any additional services. You are all very intelligent, dedicated people.  Please tell me one thriving downtown or City, where transportation isn’t a key part of their success?

It is May 5, 2012. There has not been one discussion of 2013 budget or project priorities between City Council, Steve B, and this administration. Millions of dollars in appropriations are coming forward last minute under the guise of being “mission critical”, and are foolishly being approved by us on Council without any detailed conversation, involvement, or bigger picture plans. My questions for you are what is this mission for this City?  for public safety? For infrastructure care? For downtown?

COS is the second largest City in the state and the largest County by population and area. With the willingness of our citizens and leaders to serve, there should be no reason to keep community solution building to a select few.

Listen especially from 10:00-11:15 minutes. Most of talk is cycling related but the idea of comprehensive transit options, branding, economic development, and commitment to projects all are mentioned and applicable to our City.

Sincerely,

Lisa Czelatdko (sa-lot-ko)

District 3 City Councilmember

City of Colorado Springs

Mayor’s Cup golf tournament expected to net $50,000

May 10th, 2012, 3:41 pm by

The inaugural Mayor’s Cup golf tournament at The Broadmoor next week is expected to generate $50,000, about $10,000 more than the original goal.

“We filled the tournament last month. That’s pretty tough for any tournament to pull off, as there are so many local tournaments to choose from,” defense contractor Buddy Gilmore, a former mayoral candidate and tournament chairman, said Thursday.

“We have a great tournament committee, and the help we have received from the Broadmoor staff has been tremendous,” he said.

Proceeds from the fundraiser on Thursday will benefit Mayor Steve Bach’s Spirit of the Springs initiatives, which are designed to, among other things, celebrate the good things about Colorado Springs.

El Pomar, which donated $10,000, is the lone platinum sponsor. There are four gold sponsors that donated $5,000 each, including Comcast, TechWise, Security Service Federal Credit Union and Shape Technologies LLC., which is owned by Gilmore.

The money raised from the event will be held by the Pikes Peak Community Foundation, and a citizen panel will “direct fund appropriations,” according to the mayor’s website.

The event has 132 registered golfers, city spokeswoman Mary Scott said.

Bach questions inspection process of tall townhomes

May 8th, 2012, 1:04 pm by

Mayor Steve Bach said a developer who built townhouses too tall has an ethical — and, he believes, legal — obligation to move them or modify them.

“Our Planning Department is conferring with our City Attorney’s Office,” the mayor said during his monthly press briefing Tuesday.

“I know that they’ll be a meeting very soon between our city and Regional Building Department,” he said.

“We hope the parent company in Canada will step up and meet the obligations of Todays Homes to move those townhomes.”

Does the city of Colorado Springs bear some responsibility in this mess?

Did city planners drop the ball?

Here’s what the mayor said:

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