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Tag: Lookout Mountain

  • Violence, 16-hour days and no support: Why staff say they’re fleeing Colorado’s juvenile detention centers

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    Carissa Wallace started working at the Lookout Mountain Youth Services Center in Golden two years ago because she felt strongly about helping rehabilitate young people convicted of crimes.

    She loved the teens and loved the work.

    But staffing shortages began to take a toll. Management routinely mandated employees pull 16-hour shifts multiple days a week because they were so short-staffed. Fewer workers meant there was nobody to respond to crises or adequately monitor the young people in their care, she said. Safety concerns mounted.

    Wallace said she came home every day and cried. She went to the doctor for medication to help deal with all the anxiety the job brought.

    “After two years, I was mentally broken from that place,” she said in an interview. “When I had to think about my safety every second of the day, I could no longer make a difference. I could no longer help the kids.”

    Colorado’s youth detention centers are facing a staffing crisis, leading to serious safety concerns for employees and youth and low worker morale, current and former staffers told The Denver Post. The Division of Youth Services, which oversees the state’s 12 detention and commitment facilities, employs more than 1,000 employees, according to state data. Nearly 500 additional jobs remain vacant.

    Some facilities, such as the Mount View Youth Services Center in Lakewood, reported a 57% staff vacancy rate, according to June figures compiled by the state. At the Spring Creek Youth Services Center in Colorado Springs, nearly 10% of its staff at one point in November were out due to injuries sustained on the job.

    Current and former staff say leadership deserves a large chunk of the blame. Employees say they don’t feel management supports them or listens to their concerns. Higher-ups aren’t on the floor dealing with riots, they say, or leading programs. When situations do get out of control, staff say the brass simply looks for someone to blame.

    “The administration says they care,” said Kim Espinoza, a former Lookout Mountain staffer, “but their actions say otherwise.”

    Alex Stojsavljevic, the Division of Youth Services’ new director, acknowledged in an interview that working in youth detention is difficult. Retaining staff is a big priority with ample opportunities for improvement, he said. The division plans to be intentional about the people it hires into these roles, making sure that candidates know what they’re signing up for.

    He hopes to sell a vision that one can make youth corrections a long, fulfilling career.

    “Change is afoot in our department,” said Stojsavljevic, who took the mantle in October. “Just because we’ve done something for 20 or 30 years doesn’t mean we have to continue to do it that way.”

    Critical staffing levels

    Staffing shortages at Colorado prisons and youth centers have remained a persistent problem in recent years, though vacancy rates at the DYS facilities far outpace those at the state’s adult prisons.

    A lack of adequate employees means adult inmates can’t access essential services like medical, dental and mental health care, according to a 2024 report from the Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition. Education, employment and treatment programs lag.

    “Simply put, because of the staff shortage, the (Department of Corrections) is not able to fulfill its organizational mission, responsibilities and constitutional mandates,” the report’s authors wrote.

    Studies point to a litany of physical and mental health issues facing corrections workers.

    Custody staff have a post-traumatic stress disorder rate of 34%, 10 times higher than the national average, according to One Voice United, a national organization of corrections officers. The average life expectancy for a corrections worker is 60, compared to 75 for the general population. Divorce and substance abuse rates are higher than in any other public safety profession, the organization noted, while suicide rates are double that of police officers.

    The Colorado Department of Corrections has a 12.6% overall department vacancy rate, according to state figures. Correctional officer vacancies sit at 11%, while clinical and medical staff openings are nearly 20%.

    Meanwhile, nearly one in three DYS positions is vacant.

    The most common open positions are for the lowest level correctional workers, called youth services specialists. The Betty. K. Marler Youth Services Center in Lakewood currently has 23 vacant positions for this classification of employee out of 63 total slots. The facility is also short 10 teachers. Platte Valley Youth Services Center in Greeley has 21 open positions for the lowest-tier youth services specialist role out of 71 total jobs.

    The same candidates who might work at DYS are also being recruited by adult corrections, public safety departments and behavioral health employers, Stojsavljevic said, leading to fierce competition for these applicants.

    Current and former DYS workers say the staffing issues serve as a vicious cycle: The fewer employees there are, the more mandated overtime and extra shifts that the current staff are forced to take on. Those people, then, quickly burn out from the long hours and dangerous working conditions, they say.

    Wallace, the former Lookout Mountain worker, said almost every day for the past year, leadership mandated staff stay late or work double shifts. This routinely meant working 16-hour days.

    “It got to the point where people weren’t answering their phones,” she said. “People were calling out sick because they were overworked and exhausted.”

    Wallace estimated that 80% of the time, the facility operated at critical staffing levels or below. State law requires juvenile detention facilities to have one staff member for every eight teens, but workers say that wasn’t always the case.

    Many days, staffers said, there weren’t enough employees to respond to emergencies. In some cases, that meant the young men themselves assisted staff in breaking up fights with their peers.

    One night, some of the teens set off the fire alarm at Lookout Mountain, which unlocked the doors and allowed the young people to run around campus, climb on buildings and break windows, workers said. Without enough staff to rein in the chaos, employees wanted to call 911.

    But they said they were told they would be fired if they did. Leadership, they learned, didn’t want it covered by the press.

    “Our jobs, our lives were threatened because they didn’t want media coverage,” Espinoza said.

    Stojsavljevic said the department is “acutely aware” of the mandated work problem, though he admitted that in 24-hour facilities, staff will occasionally be told to work certain shifts.

    The division has implemented a volunteer sign-up list, where staff can earn additional incentives for working these extra shifts.

    Since he’s been in the job, the state’s juvenile facilities have never dropped below minimum staffing standards, Stojsavljevic said.

    Routine violence in DYS facilities

    Staff say violence is an almost daily occurrence inside DYS facilities, which contributes to poor staff retention.

    The division, since Jan. 1, recorded 35 fights and 94 assaults at the Lookout Mountain complex, The Post reported in September. Since March 1, police officers have responded 77 times to the Golden campus for a variety of calls, including assaults on youth and staff, sexual assault, riots, criminal mischief and contraband, Golden Police Department records show.

    Twenty of these cases concerned assaults on staff by youth in their care.

    Multiple employees suffered concussions after being punched repeatedly in the head, the reports detailed. Others were spit on, bitten, placed in headlocks and verbally threatened with violence.

    Chaz Chapman, a former Lookout Mountain worker, previously told The Post that he reported three or four assaults to police during his tenure, adding, “I was expecting to get jumped every day.”

    “We were basically never able to handle situations physically, and the kids knew that; they were stronger than 90% of their staff,” Chapman told The Post in September. “The ones who stood in their way would get assaulted, such as myself.”

    Staff said leadership still expected them to show up to work, even while injured.

    Espinoza said she injured her knee during a restraint, requiring crutches. DYS continued to put her on the schedule, she said. So the staffer hobbled around the large Golden campus through the snow and ice.

    One supervisor had his head cracked open at work this year, Espinoza said. He went to the hospital and returned to Lookout. Wallace said she’s been to the doctor 20 times since she started the job due to injuries sustained at work. She said she still has long-lasting shoulder pain.

    “If they’re gonna keep hiring women who can’t restrain teenage boys, people are going to get hurt,” she said. “That was an everyday thing.”

    In November, 28 DYS employees were out of work on injury leave, according to data provided by the state. Spring Creek Youth Services Center in Colorado Springs had nine workers injured out of 91 total staff. The state did not divulge how these people were hurt.

    Stojsavljevic said safety is the division’s No. 1 focus area. If staff are injured on the job, he said, it’s important that they’re supported.

    “Staff have to be both physically healthy and emotionally healthy to do this work,” the director said.

    Division policies allow injured employees to take leave if they need it. Depending on the level of injury, some staff can return to work without having youth contact, Stojsavljevic said.

    ‘That place takes your soul’

    But workers interviewed by The Post overwhelmingly blamed management for the division’s poor staffing levels.

    As staff worked 16-hour days and were mandated to come in on their days off, they said administrators wouldn’t pitch in.

    “A lot of people felt it’s unfair,” Wallace said. “The people making a good amount of money weren’t truly being leaders. They were forcing us to pick up the slack, but they didn’t want to deal with youth. They wanted to sit at a desk, collect their check, and go home for the day.”

    New recruits were thrown into the deep end with barely any training or support, employees said. Those new staffers quickly saw the grueling hours and how tired their coworkers were all the time. Many left within weeks of starting the gig.

    “I could see their souls were literally gone,” Wallace said. “That place takes your soul.”

    After safety, Stojsavljevic said the department is prioritizing quality and innovation. Leadership wants to make sure that programs and policies are actually getting better results.

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  • Criminal investigation underway into car fire on westbound Interstate 70 near Genesee exit Friday morning

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    JEFFERSON COUNTY, Colo. — A criminal investigation is underway into a car fire on westbound Interstate 70 near the Genesee exit Friday morning, the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office said.

    Westbound I-70 closed down to just one lane, and mountain traffic backed up for nearly 40 minutes to Morrison Friday morning, Denver7 Traffic Expert Jayson Luber reported.

    Criminal investigation into car fire on WB I-70 near Genesee exit Friday morning

    The vehicle fire was reported around 2:20 a.m. Friday, Jeffco Sheriff’s Office Director of Public Affairs Mark Techmeyer told Denver7.

    Drivers were diverted onto U.S. Route 40, which parallels I-70, according to Luber. Some drivers tried to get off at the Morrison exit to get to Highway 40. Luber advised it might be quicker to go through Evergreen to get around the closure.

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  • Law enforcement shooting in Evergeen Walmart parking lot ends in crash on I-70 at Lookout Mountain

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    JEFFERSON COUNTY, Colo. — A law enforcement shooting in the parking lot of an Evergreen Walmart ended in a crash on Interstate 70 that has shut down all eastbound lanes at Lookout Mountain.

    Mark Techmeyer, director of public affairs for the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, said the “convoluted situation” began with a stolen Ford F-150 out of Summit County. The owner was tracking the truck and working with the Summit County Sheriff’s Office.

    At some point on Thursday, the truck stopped at a Maverik gas station in Clear Creek County. Deputies with the county’s sheriff’s office got involved and tracked the stolen truck to the Walmart in Evergreen just before 5 p.m.

    Personnel with the Clear Creek County Sheriff’s Office, Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office and Colorado State Patrol set up in the Walmart parking lot in order to recover the vehicle.

    The driver of the stolen truck reportedly parked, went inside the Walmart, and came back to the vehicle. According to Techmeyer, the suspect started to drive out of the parking lot when Clear Creek deputies and CSP “lit him up in the parking lot,” meaning they turned on their emergency lights and tried to conduct a traffic stop.

    The driver reportedly sped up and rammed the law enforcement vehicles. They then backed up and rammed the vehicles “several times,” according to the sheriff’s office spokesperson.

    The CSP trooper got out of their cruiser and fired several shots at the driver and the stolen vehicle, according to Techmeyer. No one was hit.

    It is unclear if the driver had a weapon or fired shots at law enforcement.

    At one point, CSP said the suspect rammed the stolen vehicle into the CSP cruiser’s driver’s side door, causing the door to strike a trooper in the face.

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    The driver eventually took off, and “the chase was on,” Techmeyer said.

    The driver went on eastbound Highway 74 before merging onto eastbound I-70. CSP said the trooper who was struck in the face performed a tactical vehicle intervention (TVI) on the stolen truck, causing the driver to crash out near milepost 259. The truck ended up in the emergency truck pull-off area, according to Techmeyer.

    The driver suffered injuries from the “ramming” and the crash, Techmeyer said, and was taken to the hospital. The injured trooper was also taken to the hospital.

    Eastbound I-70 closure at Lookout Mountain 9-11-25

    Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office

    Even though the truck was off the road, Techmeyer said law enforcement shut down all eastbound lanes of I-70 because a box marked hazardous for radioactive material was found in the back of the truck. The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office Bomb Squad responded to the scene and determined that the box contained a tool that had radioactive material in it. The tool cannot be moved until the vendor comes out and retrieves it, according to Techmeyer.

    Eastbound I-70 has been closed at Lookout Mountain for several hours. CSP said the roadway should reopen in two to four hours.

    The First Judicial Critical Incident Response Team (CIRT) was activated and will investigate the trooper shooting, while CSP will lead the criminal investigation.

    Eastbound I-70 closure at Lookout Mountain 9-11-25

    Colorado Department of Transportation

    This incident comes one day after a student opened fire at Evergreen High School, critically wounding two of his peers before turning the gun on himself. The shooter died from his self-inflicted injury.

    “It’s a lot for this small, tight-knit community in a very small timeframe,” Techmeyer said.

    Community members and law enforcement were at a vigil when Thursday’s trooper shooting took place. Techmeyer said the law enforcement presence at the vigil may have contributed to the quick response to the Walmart.

    “The bell rings and we come running,” he said.

    The sheriff’s office spokesperson did not release the suspect’s identity.

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  • Youth detention center in Golden emptied amid what advocates called deteriorating safety conditions

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    Colorado’s Division of Youth Services last month removed all youth from its Lookout Mountain detention center amid what advocates say were deteriorating safety conditions.

    All 36 young people at Lookout Mountain Youth Services Center in Golden were temporarily transferred to other state-run facilities, DYS interim director Dave Lee told juvenile justice stakeholders in an Aug. 28 memo reviewed by The Denver Post. Many of the staff members there have also been temporarily relocated to support youth at their new centers.

    Lee did not discuss the reasoning for the sudden move, only saying that this “will allow DYS to use available statewide resources to support youth currently assigned” to Lookout Mountain.

    “The division takes action like this from time to time and comes as part of our ongoing commitment to ensuring the highest quality of care for the youth we serve,” he wrote.

    A DYS spokesperson, when contacted by The Post last week, was similarly vague about why the state had emptied the long-troubled campus.

    “The temporary transfer of youth and staff from the Lookout Mountain Youth Services Center to other DYS facilities is a result of our commitment to providing a supportive environment that enables youth to achieve success,” spokesperson Alex Urbach said in an email. “After careful consideration and an assessment of staffing capacity, the division transferred youth to other facilities to provide them with increased supports to meet the dynamic needs of (Lookout Mountain’s) complex youth population.”

    Lee, through the DYS spokesperson, declined an interview request for this story.

    Urbach said the division anticipates returning to normal operations “at some point this calendar year.”

    Dana Walters Flores, Colorado campaign coordinator at the National Center for Youth Law, said her organization in early August received a critical mass of calls from parents and advocates saying Lookout Mountain “was in real trouble.”

    “The conditions of confinement deteriorated rapidly in ways that felt unmanageable to staff and kids living there,” she said.

    Staff had done everything they could and used all the tools at their disposal, Flores said. But reports kept coming about brutality, discrimination and the improper use of physical restraint by Lookout Mountain’s administration, she said.

    At that point, she said, a number of organizations that go onto the campus to provide services got wind that “something potentially very dangerous was going to happen there.”

    A second person, who spoke to The Post on condition of anonymity because they continue to work with youth inside DYS, said they grew so alarmed by a dangerous rumor circulating inside Lookout Mountain that they urged one of their teens to report it to the state child abuse hotline.

    Flores said she reported the urgent concerns to DYS leadership as well as the Office of the Colorado Child Protection Ombudsman, which investigates youth safety issues, in mid-August. The ombudsman, Stephanie Villafuerte, declined to comment on the report.

    Soon after, Lee announced the changes at Lookout Mountain. DYS officials did not respond to questions from The Post about safety concerns at the facility.

    “I want to commend leadership at the division for recognizing this was a circumstance where they needed to proactively do something that I don’t know if there’s precedent for,” Flores said. “Moving all the youth from a facility in order to prevent injury or the loss of life to kids or staff is exactly how we hope that any youth correctional leader will behave. It took a lot of courage and creativity on their part to do what they did.”

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    Sam Tabachnik

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  • Zoning complaint leaves bakery on Lookout Mountain searching for solutions and avoiding potential closure

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    GOLDEN, Colo. — Cyclists and coffee lovers have found a new place to fuel up on Lookout Mountain with Et Voila opening its doors in April, but the family-owned bakery is now left worried about closing down due to zoning regulations.

    “I’m so happy it’s here. I am concerned that it’s in danger of not being so,” Alexander Lehr, customer, said.

    The bakery opened in April, serving up coffees along with croissants, with customers knowing they need to get there early before the business sells out. Rachel Miquel Dufour explained that everything is made in-house before 7 a.m., showcasing their fresh ingredients and baking techniques.

    Cesar Sabogal

    “In order to make this happen, we sold everything we have,” said Dufour. “My husband and my sister, we put our money together, invested into this building and the things inside, and to be able to make it happen, we had to be able to live on site.”

    Two trailers are also on the property that are designed to look similar to the bakery. Dufour explained her family sleeps there to be close to work, along with using it as offices and a test kitchen.

    While the bakery is zoned for commercial use, Jefferson County Planning and Zoning received a complaint in September about two construction trailers on site and occupied. Dufour said if the family had known the trailers needed the same zoning, they would have done so.

    trailers on property.jpg

    Cesar Sabogal

    “If zoning keeps pushing with their violation thing, they will start fining our landlord, who of course, will give it back to us, which I understand, but our landlord can evict if he wants, because then we would be in violation,” said Dufour. “So if they start fining us and they don’t give us a variance or an exemption of some sort, then we might, they don’t understand that, but we will have to close.”

    Dufour said they have been in communication with the county since and have been granted several extensions for the temporary structures.

    Last week, the extension was up, and Dufour said they submitted paperwork again. Jefferson County Planning and Zoning confirmed the tenants sent another request on August 15 to allow the RVs to be used for living, but Zoning regulations do not allow this.

    looking out on trailers.jpg

    Cesar Sabogal

    Inside the business, customers are informed of the current situation with flyers highlighting the GoFundMe page and an online petition. Denver7 heard from a viewer worried for the bakery and wanting to help them find a solution.

    “We need a breakthrough with the zoning commission and the government officials,” said Brain Kluth. “They just need to work with this family and find that solution, because right now, if they force them to take away their homes where they’re living and that their office space and where they’re sleeping at night, those go away, then may force them to close.”

    Dufour explained that they have looked at other options, but said, “we have tried to move them and we have tried to see if we could operate the business without being on site, but it’s not possible.”

    Dufour talking about the future.jpg

    Cesar Sabogal

    Jefferson County Planning and Zoning clarified they “are not seeking to shut down the bakery” and are “following our regulations in response to a zoning complaint from a citizen.” The county also shared that one solution would be to rezone the property to allow RVs to be lived in.

    Dufour is hoping for a public hearing to share their story and showcase the impact they already are having on the community.

    “I want them to hear our hearts. I’m sorry we didn’t do the right thing. I didn’t know we would have done it, and we want to make it right, and how can we make it right,” Dufour said.

    Zoning complaint leaves bakery on Lookout Mountain searching for solutions and avoiding potential closure

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