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More information on C.A.R.E. and the Community it represents can
be found at the on-line eddition of City and Mountain Views http://www.colorado-citymtnviews.com
C.A.R.E. is the umbrella homeowner’s group serving these approximately
10,000 residents of the foothills of unincorporated Jefferson County,
Colorado, bordering Mt. Vernon Canyon.
The C.A.R.E. neighborhood is bisected by Mt. Vernon Canyon and
Interstate 70. Lookout Mountain and Mt. Vernon are on the
north side and Mt. Morrison, Genesee Mountain and Lininger Mountain
are on the south side of Mt. Vernon Canyon. The C.A.R.E. residents
live in unincorporated Jefferson County, outside the borders of
any city. C.A.R.E. is coalition of homeowners' associations and
neighborhoods from the Hogbacks to Chief Hosa and Rainbow Hills,
and from Clear Creek to Bear Creek.
The Canyon Area Residents for The Environment, C.A.R.E., was formed
in 1987. Its purpose, as stated in the State charter is to ". .
. preserve and enhance the community and environment . . . to promote
awareness and provide a forum for community deliberation . . ."
Its goal is to provide unified affirmative action to promote positive
governmental action consistent with the needs of the area, and to
provide a vehicle to promote community identity. A governing council
consists of a delegate from each of the member associations and
groups. Meetings are held regularly to which all are welcome to
attend and participate. C.A.R.E. provides access to information
and support for the various neighborhoods in the Foothills immediately
west of Denver, Golden, and Morrison, Colorado. C.A.R.E. started
as an successor of a short-lived organization called the Front Range
United Communities. The core from that first organization,
recognizing the need for County monitoring of land issues, enlisted
representatives from the various homeowners' associations in the
Mt Vernon Canyon, and began working together on the issues important
to the various communities.
A few of the early citizens who worked for nearly a year getting
CARE legally set up as a non-profit organization were Greg Henika
from Idledale, Rick Weinberg from Mt Vernon, Bob Baily and Judith
Pearl, Genesee, Dorothy Reed, Paradise Hills, and John Studebaker
from Lininger Mountain. Serious consideration was given as to how
to set up the mechanism for taking a stand on County issues . .
. consensus versus one vote per homeowners' organization. After
calling in representatives from some of Evergreen's umbrella groups,
it was decided to give one vote to each delegate, no matter how
large the organization they represented. A financially secure beginning
was made possible when the Hill and Dale, a group originally formed
to oppose the Genesee development, officially folded and turned
over their treasury to CARE.
Under the presidency of Rick Weinberg, attorney, CARE immediately
jumped Into the County hearings on towers . . . towers on Mt Morrison,
and towers on Lookout Mountain. Those early years were busy ones,
for CARE also supported the group that was opposing the large gravel
mining operation near Clear Creek Canyon. And a number of delegates
worked for five years on the Central Mountain Community Plan, a
technical document used by the County Commissioners as a guide for
future development in Mt Vernon Canyon. The committee, chosen by
the County Commissioners, was originally composed of CARE members
and others from the business community. But in the end, after five
long years, only the CARE members, Karen Bull, Greg Henika, Judith
Pearl, Rock Pring, Dorothy Reed, and John Studebaker hung in there
to complete the project.
Some areas of activity we have been and continue to be involved
in include the fostering of area homeowners’ associations, preservation
of nearby Open Space and parklands, antenna farm concerns, wildfire
prevention, weed and insect pest control, zoning concerns, Colorado
Heritage Area designation and water resources. Also, we have sponsored
political candidates forums, tours of historic places, landscape
architecture tours, and other activities of interest to area residents.
Care’s lifeblood is rejuvenated year by year by the willingness
of new volunteers to join in to address common causes. We continue
to need and encourage participation and involvement in dozens of
causes and activities important to our residents.
C.A.R.E.
is a community of 10,000 people living
on the 5 mountains bordering Mt. Vernon Canyon west of Golden, Colorado.
C.A.R.E.
PURPOSE "to preserve and enhance community and environment"
C.A.R.E.
Response to threat of long term exposure to High Power
Broadcast Radiation. PROJECTS AND COMMITTEES
C.A.R.E.
PROJECTS AND COMMITTEES
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