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Tag: Shontel Lewis

  • Denver opens cold-weather shelter at former hotel amid squabble between mayor, council

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    One of the largest emergency shelters in Denver’s system is again offering refuge from the cold this weekend after Mayor Mike Johnston unilaterally opened the site Friday — despite the City Council rejecting a contract for it late last year.

    The Aspen, formerly a DoubleTree hotel in northeast Denver, has space for up to 250 people in its ballroom and will be open as freezing temperatures pummel the Mile High City for the next few days.

    Johnston’s decision came after the city’s four other emergency shelters reached capacity on Thursday, the first night of the cold snap. The temperatures, expected to fall to near-zero Friday night and early Saturday, have the potential to cause frostbite in less than 30 minutes without proper attire.

    “With life-threatening cold settling over the city and people at risk of suffering serious injury or death, Mayor Johnston informed Council this morning that we will be opening the ballrooms at 4040 Quebec (St.) for temporary emergency cold weather shelter,” spokesman Jon Ewing wrote in a statement Friday.

    The near-failure to open needed cold-weather shelter space is just the latest chapter in an growing list of disagreements between the mayor and council members in which both sides have pointed fingers at one another.

    Denver extends severe weather shelter activation — and adds space — as cold grips city

    During a meeting on Dec. 8, 11 of the council’s 13 members voted to reject a contract to use the Aspen’s large space as a cold-weather shelter. (A separate contract with another provider, Urban Alchemy, covers the Aspen’s day-to-day use as a noncongregate shelter in the city’s homelessness initiative.)

    Councilwoman Shontel Lewis, whose district includes the shelter, said at the time that the mayor had promised her in 2023 that the site wouldn’t be used for the purpose of cold-weather sheltering.

    “My district is already overrepresented with shelters, with eight of them,” Lewis said. “This is ridiculous.”

    Only Councilmen Kevin Flynn and Darrell Watson voted to approve the contract last month.

    Another council-approved contract with Bayaud Works allows the city to use the ballroom space for short-term emergencies, Ewing said, and that is how the mayor’s office was able to open it Friday.

    Lewis has repeatedly asked the mayor’s administration to spread out the locations of the city’s homelessness services since she joined the council in 2023. Now, she says the mayor’s office is manufacturing an emergency to sidestep her continued protestations.

    Johnston “has failed to run the city with a long-term strategy,” she said in an interview Friday.

    Lewis said there shouldn’t be a cold-weather shelter at the same place as noncongregate housing. Instead, she asked for the Aspen’s ballroom to be used as a navigation center offering resources to homeless people.

    But Johnston’s team said they were taken by surprise when the council rejected the contract just as the winter months were setting in and hadn’t had nearly enough time to find enough shelter space since then.

    “The real emergency is that it is 5 degrees outside and people are going to die if we don’t get them inside,” Ewing said.

    The Aspen made the most sense to use, he said, because it’s already set up with cots, showers and bathrooms. A site that’s well-known among the city’s homeless population, it also mostly serves people who are already in that area, he said.

    “We do not just have shelter sites lying around. There are only so many spaces, and there is a likelihood we would need to hold community meetings, go through a full council process and potentially even rezone,” Ewing said.

    He added that the city didn’t plan to use the Aspen for cold-weather shelter next year. A new site for emergencies hasn’t been chosen yet, in part because of the limited options.

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    Elliott Wenzler

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  • City of Denver studying potential of ‘social housing’ model to increase affordable housing access

    City of Denver studying potential of ‘social housing’ model to increase affordable housing access

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    DENVER — The City of Denver is studying the potential of a housing program that would decide a resident’s rent based on a percentage of their income rather than setting an income requirement.

    Housing programs in Denver have helped numerous people get into homes, including Central Park homeowner David Kugler. He was able to purchase his home with help through the Department of Housing Stability’s (HOST) Affordable Home Ownership Program. The program provides housing opportunities to low to moderate-income households at a lower price than if the home was on the open market.

    Richard Butler

    Homeowner David Kugler

    “I closed on my home in December 2019. I’ve lived here for about four and a half years, and I love it. I’m not planning on moving anytime soon. I can’t afford anything else in Denver, and so I’m so thankful for this program. I purchased my home for probably about $150,000 less than what it would have appraised at the market rate,” said Kugler.

    While the city currently holds the deed, Kugler will be the sole owner after the house is paid off.

    “There was a market rate appraisal for the purchase of the home, and an inspector came in and gave a market rate appraisal. But the city actually is the one that determined the actual purchase price in order to keep this affordable for people like me,” Kugler explained.

    Denver currently has several affordable housing programs, but Denver City Councilwoman Shontel Lewis hopes to expand housing programs to reach more residents.

    Last year, Lewis introduced a budget amendment to study social housing under the climate justice lens. She wanted to tackle concerns with the climate as well as housing affordability. The study began early this year.

    Denver City Councilwoman Shontel Lewis

    Richard Butler

    District 8 Councilwoman Shontel Lewis

    “It’s really this concept to think about adaptability. How can we provide housing for folks while also thinking about, what are the things that we can intentionally integrate into the building and developing of those housing that may have an impact on our climate? Can we think about the usage of solar panels? Or can we think about how we intentionally incorporate electric versus gas? And things of that nature,” she said

    Similar to low-income housing, social housing removes the income requirement and replaces it with a set percentage of your income that you would pay monthly. Social housing is usually owned by the city and under community control.

    “No matter if you make $200,000 or if you make $20,000, you’re only paying a certain percentage of your income,” said Lewis.

    social housing explainer graphic

    Richard Butler

    The range would be 20 percent to 35 percent of your gross income. For example, non-family households in Denver County have a median income of $67,000, according to census data. That means, after taxes, you would take home an estimated $4,118 per month. Therefore, your rent could be as low as $1,117 and as high as $1,954. At its highest, it would amount to 47 percent of your take-home income.

    “If we decided to put dollars to that as a city, I think you could actually see that as early as 2025, to be honest, because not all social housing buildings have to be things that we are building from the ground up,” Lewis said.

    The study is expected to wrap by the end of summer.


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    Richard Butler

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