New Oases for Denver Food Deserts

By Matthew Van Deventer

Three neighborhoods are sprouting food co-operatives to satisfy demand in the grocery deserts of Denver and provide residents with affordable food that is both high quality and locally sourced. 

A food co-op is a community-owned grocery store. Typically, co-ops are stocked with affordable and locally sourced foods and products, and are often located in low and middle-income neighborhoods. The members of a co-op are able to vote on decisions for the store.

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Denver VOICE
Zero Waste Store Coming to Denver

By Matthew Van Deventer  |  Photos by Giles Clasen

Lyndsey Manderson and her husband Jesse will be opening Denver’s first package-free grocery store, adding to the citywide movement of living a more sustainable lifestyle.

ZERO Market is not a new concept. If anything, it is a new take on an old concept: buy what you need. 

About 75 percent of the products sold will be dry goods. The rest will be liquids, fresh local produce, and select locally prepared foods from featured Denver artisans. Instead of buying a couple boxes of spaghetti noodles or a jar of honey, customers will be required to bring their own containers and serve themselves.

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Denver VOICE
Word on the Street

By Dwayne Pride, Voice Vendor  |  Photo by Sarah Harvey

Denver VOICE vendor interviews a formerly homeless staff member of Baltimore’s street paper.

A few months ago I was attending a conference in Denver and I had the pleasure of meeting a man from the Baltimore. His name was Damien Haussling. He handed me a black and white paper called Word on the Street, Baltimore’s street paper. We talked about it for a few minutes. 

Anybody who was anybody knew at the time that major civil unrest was going on in Baltimore. I could not help but ask him what he thought was really going on there, since he was part of an organization that was right next to the street. Which led me to ask him more about it in general.

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Denver VOICE
Keeping RiNo “Gritty”

By Matthew Van Deventer  |  Photos by Chase Doelling

Denver’s River North neighborhood is one of the most quickly developing areas in Colorado and steps are being taken to make sure the area keeps its cool as developers move in and prices go up.

In April 2014, co-founder and board chair of the River North Arts District (RiNo) Tracy Weil went to the city to see how the area’s main neighborhood association could organize and partner with the city to protect its residents, artists, and business owners. 

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Denver VOICE
Letter from the Editor

Every Monday, I set aside a few hours to meet one-on-one with vendors who want to write. Sometimes they bring in poems to show me. Other times we create a story outline or workshop an idea. 

These writing workshops are the highlight of my week. And lately, I’ve been noticing something exciting. In addition to the poems and personal statements, a few vendors have started writing about current issues in Denver. 

 

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Denver VOICE
Vendor Profile: Raelene Johnson

By Linette Hidalgo  |  Photo by Emma Fullerton

Raelene Johnson is a staple on the streets of Boulder. You are likely to have seen this colorful vendor on the Pearl Street Mall or near the Boulder Farmer’s Market. With her multi-colored top hat rimmed with bright pink fur and a vivacious personality to match, she is hard to miss. 

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Denver VOICE
No Place for Us: Transgender and Homeless

By Sarah Ford  |  Photo by Giles Clasen

After two years in Denver, Onii Kennedy has not allowed his heart to be paved by the city; it remains buried in the woodlands of Texas, the place he considers his home. He would never have left behind his childhood home in the first place, but didn’t have much of a choice. 

“Every year I go back and check the prices to find out if there are still houses for sale in that neighborhood,” he said. Just in case one day he gets a chance to move back. 

 

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Denver VOICE
Taking it to the Streets

By Sarah Ford | Photos by Giles Clasen 

On a sunny afternoon in Boulder, the Denver VOICE took to the Pearl Street Mall to meet its buskers and record the stories of the folks involved in some of the country’s most unique work.

Scattered throughout the Pearl Street Mall, Boulder’s street performers blend into the lively scene of meandering locals and tourists. Most passersby will spare only minutes to take in a magic show, a song, or a glance at the contortionist on the corner. Many performers have spent years honing their crafts, returning to the streets daily to earn those second glances or singles thrown into their hats. At best, they make a minor impression on a person’s day. For most, they are not even a footnote. But those single bills and seconds spared are enough to support an entire lifestyle—and sometimes an entire career. 

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Denver VOICE
2015 Point-in-Time Survey Results
Each year, volunteers scour the streets of Metro Denver in an attempt to count the number of people experiencing homelessness on a particular night. It’s the best method currently available to predict the number of people that will need services in an area.
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Denver VOICE
Organization Evolves to Advocate for Denver’s Homeless

By Danielle Krolewicz

People Rising Against Poverty (P-RAP) is a collaborative group born from what was formerly the Homeless Advisory Committee (HAC) Network. P-RAP includes representatives from agencies such as Denver Homeless Out Loud, BHAC, Cities of Refuse, 9to5 Colorado, El Centro, and Buck Foundation, among others.

Originally, HAC Network operated under the intention of reaching out to service providers in the Denver area to assist in developing more HACs at their respective agencies. However, it was discovered that most service providers do not have the capacity to develop a HAC network as an individual agency. P-RAP is a response to this.

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Denver VOICE
Denver may be Nearing an end to Veteran Homelessness

By Sarah Ford

 

Though Dana Niemela had given eight years of service to the military when she left in 2005, it took another five for her to call herself a veteran. In fact, it wasn’t until she had spent five years working in the private sector that fellow veterans encouraged her to visit Veterans Affairs (VA), where she found out she qualified as a disabled veteran. 

“It took that long for somebody to finally pound it into my head that, number one, I was a veteran, and that, number two, I was entitled to benefits,” said Niemela. “I thought ‘well, what’s happening to other people?’’’ 

 

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Denver VOICE
Resources for Homeless Veterans in Denver

By Jamie Swinnerton

The Denver VOICE takes a closer look at some of the partnerships between organizations serving homeless veterans.

 

For many homeless veterans, the journey to find resources starts at The Community Resource and Referral Center (CRRC), run by the Department of Veterans Affairs at 3030 Downing St. The CRRC was set up to be an easy and accessible drop-in center for all homeless veterans in the area. Its initial goal was to reach out to those who had yet to engage with the VA and its services by reaching them where they are. An outreach worker in the area works to identify veterans and bring them to the CRRC, or give them an assessment in the field that informs them of the services they are eligible for.

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Denver VOICE
Flag Flying Across America

By Bill Powers, VOICE vendor

Vendor Bill Powers has become an expert on flying “flags.”

 

Flag flying—also known as flying signs—has a bad stigma. Some people think it’s easy money for the lazy. I would suggest they try it sometime and see for themselves. It is not easy, and it makes me feel strange due to I’m the kind of person who’d rather do something for others than ask for something from others.

I’ve had very hard jobs, yet they’ve been very rewarding. One of these was working on the Mississippi River on a fleet boat. I learned to fly flags while working for carnivals. When you’re working a carnival, you have three months of downtime every winter.

 

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Denver VOICE
Through the Roof: Home Prices in Denver

Research by Ilse Reardon  | Source: Trulia.com
Graphics by Hannah Bragg

According to data from the Denver Metro Association of Realtors, the average price of a home in metro Denver increased to $390,067 in February, up from $326,958 in February 2014.

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Denver VOICE
West Colfax “Re-Imagined” for Peds and Cyclists

By Matthew Van Deventer

“Pedestrian friendly” is not a phrase typically used to describe West Colfax Avenue. However, the West Colfax Business Improvement District (BID) is tackling that challenge and making changes to their stretch of Colfax that will improve the lives of walkers and cyclists and benefit business. 

Dan Shah is the executive director of the West Colfax BID and the guiding force of Re-Imagining West Colfax, the BID’s project to transform the corridor with new development, art, bus shelters, and pedestrian accessibility.

“Historically, transportation engineers have been reluctant to do anything besides accommodate the automobile,” explains Shah. “There has been a shift in the way [Denver] thinks, and it’s an evolution, but you can definitely see evidence of it around town.” 

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Denver VOICE
Is the Fare Change Fair?

By David Gordon, VOICE vendor

To make his way across Denver, David Gordon has often relied on bus transfers and the kindness of others. He worries that RTD’s fare changes will make it even harder for Denver’s poor to help each other afford public transportation.

RTD fare increases will have a severe impact on the most vulnerable group of people in Denver—the poor.

Overall, I like the direction RTD is moving in with the expansion: North Metro Rail Line, Gold Line, as well as Denver International Airport (DIA) rail, and the extension into Lone Tree & Highlands Ranch. Having used public transportation in two other cities with similar populations, it is my opinion that RTD Denver has a superior public transportation system.

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Denver VOICE
Neighborhood Yards Transformed for Public Good

Story and Photo by Chris Cuddihy

“Look. This pepper is eight centimeters tall,” announces Jovial Garden’s horticulturist Seth Moon while holding a small ruler against a seedling. Inside the recently revamped greenhouse at Edgewater Elementary, second and third graders inch forward for a closer look. 

Jovial Gardens is part of Jovial Concepts, a nonprofit inspiring the public to take part in activities that will improve the safety and the beauty of their communities. In 2013 Jovial Concepts initiated its gardening project in Edgewater. Overseeing 40 young children nurture vegetable seeds into seedlings that will later be transplanted onto nearly 10,000 square feet of gardening area—all donated by Edgewater and vicinity residents—is just one component of Jovial’s multi-tiered agenda. 

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Denver VOICE
The Mall

16th Street Mall Tour

By Sarah Ford
Photos by Chase Doelling

Thousands of people pour through the 16th Street Mall each day.  The mix of working Denverites and visitors means the Mall is full of chain stores, restaurants, and tacky souvenir shops. But dotted along the street are hidden gems of the city’s culture and history, and the hidden lives of some of the city’s poorest citizens.

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Denver VOICE
RiNo

RiNo/Five Points Tour

By Tessa Cheek
Photos by Sarah Harvey

An industrial neighborhood wedged between the South Platte River and the historic neighborhoods of Five Points and Curtis Park, RiNo (River North) is Denver’s newest arts district. Curtis Park and Five Points are some of the oldest residential neighborhoods in Denver, and many of the service agencies serving those experiencing homelessness are located here.

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Denver VOICE