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Tag: teller county

  • Metro Denver’s housing crunch hits home for residents of Sheridan RV park that will close

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    An RV park in Sheridan that has accommodated low-cost housing for decades will close to make way for a new apartment complex, leaving dozens of residents looking for new places as Colorado remains short on affordable housing and such alternatives as mobile home communities.

    The Sheridan City Council in November approved rezoning the 16-acre Flying Saucer RV Park at the intersection of West Hampden Avenue and South Bryant Street. Indiana-based Garrett Companies will submit plans to the city for a seven-building, 362-unit complex, replacing the 162 spots for recreational vehicles and tiny homes.

    Garrett and the family that has owned the property for 75 years are expected to close the deal by the end of June. Residents will have to move out by then.

    The developer and the family haven’t disclosed the financial terms.

    Anne Whipple, part of the fourth generation of the family to run the business, told Sheridan council members that the decision to sell the property wasn’t made lightly. She read a statement saying the family struggled with ending its legacy of “providing a safe, quiet community for tenants that the City of Sheridan has come to know.”

    But Whipple said the time, cost and energy to keep the park going are unsustainable. The park’s owner, 94-year-old Lucille Tourney, wants “to release her family from this burden,” she added.

    After learning last summer that the site was for sale and being eyed for new development, Steve Ohlfest started a website to rally support for saving Flying Saucer. Ohlfest, a 21-year park resident, urged people to turn out for public meetings on the project. He even contacted area mobile home park owners to gauge their interest in the property.

    Now, Ohlfest and his wife, Tina, aren’t sure where their next home will be. Just a handful of RV parks in metro Denver allow year-round living and their rates are generally higher. The Ohlfests are 16th on a waiting list for a spot in Loveland where they could move their tiny home. A Woodland Park site that caters to tiny homes hasn’t had anyone leave in five years.

    A community in Montrose that accepts tiny homes is a possibility for them. They expect to pay thousands of dollars to haul their 26,000-pound home and other belongings to the Western Slope if they move there.

    “What are our other options? We can’t afford a house in Denver,” Ohlfest said.

    Garrett Companies said it will hire a consultant to work with individual Flying Saucer residents who need help moving their recreational vehicles, finding a place to live or applying for housing and social services. The company said in December that residents should hear from the consultant after the first of the year.

    “The intent is to do right by people, particularly people of lesser means and people who are older,” said Cary Brazeman, a spokesman for Garrett.

    Meredith Long has rented a spot at Flying Saucer for three years, living in a travel trailer part of the year and moving it to Steamboat Springs where she runs a business during the winter. Long said park residents include people who travel back and forth from other homes, retirees and disabled veterans who’ve lived there for several years.

    Several have turned the park that runs along Bear Creek and has tree-lined roads into long-term homes with fenced yards and outdoor decks.

    “They kept trying to say it is temporary housing and never meant to be permanent, but that’s not how they operated it,” Long said of the park’s owners.

    The room was packed for an October Sheridan planning commission meeting on the project, Long said. After the planning commission recommended that the city council approve the rezoning, she said turnout for the meetings dropped because people felt defeated.

    Flying Saucer RV Park in Sheridan, Colorado on Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    “For me it’s just been the process that’s been the most frustrating, with the lack of communication and transparency from the city of Sheridan,” Long said.

    The park owners haven’t kept residents informed either, she added. People are uneasy after a couple of tenants were served eviction notices in the last few months, Long said.

    Whipple, the onsite manager at Flying Saucer, declined to talk to The Denver Post about Long’s concerns. She told the city council in the November meeting that 40 of the park’s spots were vacant.

    “There have been several people who have left without paying rent, leaving us with significant expenses,” Whipple said.

    City officials said they’ve kept in touch with Flying Saucer residents while considering the development plans. The city held a neighborhood meeting in June on the proposed rezoning. Notices of the planning commission and city council meetings were sent to property owners and residents within 300 feet of the RV park, including the individual RV spots.

    Notice was published in the Littleton Independent newspaper and signs in English and Spanish were posted on the property, according to the city.

    Home sweet home?

    Sheridan Community Development Director Andrew Rogge said the Garrett Companies’ rezoning application met city criteria and was consistent with the goals of the city’s comprehensive plan. He said rezoning the property from business/light industrial to planned unit development will make the site more compatible with surrounding properties, which include the River Point at Sheridan shopping center.

    And Rogge noted that a 2025 housing needs assessment showed Sheridan is short of 309 units and will need 409 more units over the next 10 years.

    Rents for the apartments that will replace the RV park will be market-rate. Rogge said in an email that Sheridan doesn’t have an ordinance requiring the developer to build a certain number of affordable housing units.

    However, city officials said two affordable housing projects were recently approved. One development will add 149 apartment units. A Habitat for Humanity project will add 63 single-family homes.

    The U.S. Census Bureau reported in 2024 that Sheridan’s median household income was $58,571 and the poverty rate was 13.5%. The statewide median household income was $97,113 and the poverty rate was 9.6%.

    A Garrett representative said during the June neighborhood meeting that rents for its apartments would likely range from $1,600 to $2,600.

    “I couldn’t afford your apartment and I make good money,” Councilman Ernie Camacho.told Garrett representatives during the council meeting.

    Camacho, the lone vote against rezoning the RV park, voiced support for more single-family homes rather than apartments.

    The council members who favored rezoning said they cared about the fate of the RV park’s residents, but respected the owner’s right to sell the property. They also said the limited terms of the leases underscored that the park wasn’t intended to be a permanent home.

    Whipple said when the family decided in 2024 to put the property on the market, they let new tenants know the leases would be capped at six months. Before then, leases were month to month but didn’t have a maximum term.

    Dawn Shepherd of Littleton urged the city council to reject the rezoning application. The former director of the Englewood Housing Authority said Sheridan has typically tried to provide housing for lower-income residents.

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    Judith Kohler

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  • Hyundai driver killed in 4-vehicle crash in Teller County

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    One person was killed in a four-vehicle crash on icy roads in a Teller County town early Monday, according to the State Patrol.

    The crash happened at 5:44 a.m. on U.S. 24 in Florissant when a Dodge Ram driving west slid into the eastbound lanes and hit a Hyundai Elantra head-on, State Patrol officials said in a news release.

    A Jeep Gladiator driving east then slid and rear-ended the Hyundai, and a Ford F-250 heading east hit the back of the Jeep, sending the Ford off the eastbound shoulder and hitting the Hyundai.

    The driver of the Hyundai was flown to a hospital and pronounced dead, and the driver of the Dodge was taken to a hospital by ambulance.

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  • Pre-evacuation warnings lifted for brush fire near Divide, Florissant

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    Teller County officials lifted pre-evacuation warnings for a 5-acre brush fire burning between Florissant and Divide on Friday, according to the sheriff’s office.

    The pre-evacuation warning for the Highland Lakes subdivision and people living north of U.S. 24 between Cougar Canyon Point and Lower Twin Rocks Road was lifted at 5:15 p.m.

    The fire is burning north of U.S. 24 halfway between Florissant and Divide, the sheriff’s office said. The cause of the fire has not been determined, according to the Bureau of Land Management’s fire dashboard. 

    This is a developing story and may be updated.


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    Katie Langford

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  • 7 Powerball tickets sold in Colorado won between $50,000 and $1 million

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    No one in Colorado took home the nearly $1.8 billion Powerball jackpot on Saturday, but seven lucky ticket holders across the state still walked away winners.

    The seven large-prize tickets sold in Colorado are worth between $50,000 and $1 million, according to a news release from the Colorado Lottery. The prizes include:

    • $1 million from a ticket sold at a Kum & Go/Maverick at 9665 Prominent Point in Colorado Springs
    • $100,000 from a ticket sold at a Loaf N Jug at 101 West Brontosaurus Boulevard in Dinosaur
    • $100,000 from a ticket sold at a Kum & Go/Maverick at 70 West Bridge Street in Brighton
    • $100,000 from a ticket sold at a Sherman Food & Gas at 207 South Sherman Street in Fort Morgan
    • $100,000 from a ticket sold at an A-1 Food & Gas at 10300 East Sixth Avenue in Aurora
    • $50,000 from a ticket sold at a King Soopers at 17761 Cottonwood Drive in Parker
    • $50,000 from a ticket sold at Banana Belt Liquors at 300 U.S. 24 in Woodland Park

    Two Powerball players in Missouri and Texas won the nearly $1.8 billion jackpot during Saturday night’s drawing, ending the lottery game’s three-month drought without a winner. The two winners will split the jackpot.

    The winning numbers were 11, 23, 44, 61, and 62, with the Powerball number being 17.

    The winning ticket in Texas was sold at a gas station-convenience store in Fredericksburg, according to the Texas Lottery.

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    Lauren Penington

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  • Man convicted of killing, dismembering dogs in Colorado wanted in Arizona murder

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    DENVER — A man convicted in a Teller County court for killing two of his roommate’s dogs, dismembering one of them, in 2020, is now wanted in connection with an Arizona murder.

    Matthew Dieringer, 35, is accused of killing Frank Quaranta, 67, inside the victim’s Scottsdale, Arizona home on Labor Day.

    Police did not say how Quaranta died.

    On July 26, 2020, Arapahoe County Sheriff’s deputies arrested Dieringer at a Days Inn in Centennial on animal cruelty charges after the incident related to his former roommate’s two dogs, a 7-year-old Australian cattle dog “Suka” and a black dog named “Hayoka.”

    Dieringer was convicted in 2023 of felony animal cruelty and sentenced to 18 months in prison, following multiple mental health competency hearings, according to records pulled by Denver7.

    Quaranta’s body was discovered the same day he was killed after officers with the Scottsdale Police Department went to his home on a welfare check following reports from his coworkers that he failed to show up for work, according to Denver7’s sister station, KNXV-TV in Phoenix.

    Scottsdale police identified Dieringer as the suspect and issued a warrant for his arrest. However, the 35-year-old suspect remains at large.

    Police said Dieringer has a history of experiencing homelessness, and described the suspect as “manipulative and charismatic,” often befriending others to help him with a place to stay.

    If you see Dieringer, police advise that you do not approach him and call 911 immediately.

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    Robert Garrison

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  • Golden small business owner challenges U.S. Rep. Brittany Pettersen for suburban seat in Congress

    Golden small business owner challenges U.S. Rep. Brittany Pettersen for suburban seat in Congress

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    Colorado’s 7th Congressional District, centered on suburban Jefferson County, hasn’t had a Republican in the seat since Bob Beauprez left Congress nearly 20 years ago.

    But Sergei Matveyuk, an antiques repairman from Golden and the GOP contender for the seat in the Nov. 5 election, urges voters not to count him out in his battle with incumbent Brittany Pettersen. The first-term Democratic congresswoman is seeking reelection.

    “People are hurting economically,” Matveyuk, 57, told The Denver Post. “They want someone who feels the pain.”

    He’s running in a once-battleground district that has turned decidedly blue in the last decade or so, with Democratic former Rep. Ed Perlmutter winning election eight times running, until his retirement announcement in 2022 ushered in an open race.

    Pettersen, 42, a former state lawmaker from Lakewood, won the 2022 election by 16 percentage points over Republican Army veteran Erik Aadland. The bulk of the district’s electorate calls left-leaning Jefferson and Broomfield counties home, while redder areas in the district — such as Teller, Custer and Fremont counties — simply don’t have the populations to give Matveyuk a sizable boost.

    As of Sept. 30, Pettersen had raised more than $2.2 million this cycle, compared to about $35,000 collected by Matveyuk, according to campaign finance filings. There are two minor party candidates on the ballot this time: Former state lawmaker Ron Tupa is running on the Unity Party of Colorado ticket, while Patrick Bohan is running as the Libertarian candidate.

    Matveyuk, a political neophyte, said that as a small business owner, the historically high inflation of the last two years has hurt those like him who are particularly sensitive to escalating prices. But it’s his personal story that he thinks will resonate with voters in the current political climate, in which border policy has taken center stage. Matveyuk, who is of Polish descent, and his family left the Soviet Bloc in the late 1980s after experiencing life under communist rule and immigrated to the United States.

    “As an immigrant myself, I know how hard it is to start a new life — but it has to be legal,” he said.

    Matveyuk doesn’t echo former President Donald Trump’s calls for mass deportations but says migrants who “are hurting our people and committing crimes need to be deported, for sure.”

    “We need immigration reform — 40 years ago we had a regulated border and now we have a porous border,” he said.

    According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data through August, there have been more than 8.6 million migrant “encounters” at the southern U.S. border since President Joe Biden took office in 2021. That influx has prompted many big city mayors across the country, including Denver Mayor Mike Johnston, to cut city services to pay for migrant housing and plead for help from the federal government.

    Pettersen acknowledged that the U.S. asylum system is “absolutely outdated.” But many of the arriving migrants are filling jobs that businesses in the district, like nursing homes, are desperate to staff, she said.

    Making people wait years before getting work permits is an unworkable policy, Pettersen said.

    “We don’t have the people in the U.S. to meet our economic needs,” she said. “We need legal pathways based on economic need.”

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    John Aguilar

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  • More than 10 people trapped in Colorado gold mine after equipment malfunction

    More than 10 people trapped in Colorado gold mine after equipment malfunction

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    More than 10 people are trapped underground in a Colorado gold mine on Pikes Peak after an equipment malfunction, according to the Teller County Sheriff’s Office and Denver7.

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    Katie Langford

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